ACKNOWLEDGMENTS   Singled out for conspicuous merit and bravery under fire are the following personnel: Eric S. Trautmann went far above and beyond the call of duty providing background material, editing,reality checks, and a constant supply of caffeine and encouragement. Bungie for making a superb game, and in particular: Jason Jones, Alex Seropian, John Howard, andLorraine McLees. The brilliant tactical unit at Microsoft’s Franchise Development Group: Nancy Figatner, Brannon Boren,and Doug Zartman. Microsoft’s User Experience fireteam: Keith Cirillo, Jo Tyo, and Matt Whiting. The troopers at Ballantine/Del Rey: Caron Harris, David Stevenson, Steve Palmer, Crystal Velasquez—and special thanks to Steve Saffel. PROLOGUE 0500 Hours, February 12, 2535 (Military Calendar) / Lambda Serpentis System, Jericho VIITheaterof Operations“Contact. All teams stand by: enemy contact, my position.” The Chief knew there were probably more than a hundred of them—motion sensors were off the scale. He wanted to see them for himself, though; his training made that lesson clear: “Machines break. Eyesdon’t.” The four Spartans that composed Blue Team covered his back, standing absolutely silent and immobilein their MJOLNIR combat armor. Someone had once commented that they looked like Greek war godsin the armor . . . but his Spartans were far more effective and ruthless than Homer’s gods had ever been. He snaked the fiber-optic probe up and over the three-meter-high stone ridge. When it was in place, theChief linked it to his helmet’s heads-up display. On the other side he saw a valley with eroded rock walls and a river meandering through it . . . andcamped along the banks as far as he could see were Grunts. The Covenant used these stocky aliens as cannon fodder. They stood a meter tall and wore armoredenvironment suits that replicated the atmosphere of their frozen homeworld. They reminded the Chief ofbiped dogs, not only in appearance, but because their speech—even with the new translation software—was an odd combination of high-pitched squeaks, guttural barks, and growls. They were about as smart as dogs, too. But what they lacked in brainpower, they made up for in sheertenacity. He had seen them hurl themselves at their enemies until the ground was piled high with theircorpses . . . and their opponents had depleted their ammunition. These Grunts were unusually well armed: needlers, plasma pistols, and there were four stationaryplasma cannons. Those could be a problem. One other problem: there were easily a thousand of them. This operation had to go off without a hitch. Blue Team’s mission was to draw out the Covenant rearguard and let Red Team slip through in the confusion. Red Team would then plant a HAVOK tacticalnuke. When the next Covenant ship landed, dropped its shields, and started to unload its troops, they’dget a thirty-megaton surprise. The Chief detached the optics and took a step back from the rock wall. He passed the tacticalinformation along to his team over a secure COM channel. “Four of us,” Blue-Two whispered over the link. “And a thousand of them? Piss-poor odds for the littleguys.” “Blue-Two,” the Chief said, “I want you up with those Jackhammer launchers. Take out the cannons andsoften the rest of them. Blue-Three and Five, you follow me up—we’re on crowd control. Blue-Four: you get the welcome mat ready. Understood?” Four blue lights winked on his heads-up display as his team acknowledged the orders. “On my mark.” The Chief crouched and readied himself. “Mark!” Blue-Two leaped gracefully atop the ridge—three meters straight up. There was no sound as the half tonof MJOLNIR armor and Spartan landed on the limestone. She hefted one launcher and ran along the ridge—she was the fastest Spartan on the Chief’s team. Hewas confident those Grunts wouldn’t be able to track her for the three seconds she’d be exposed. Inquick succession, Blue-Two emptied both of the Jackhammer’s tubes, dropped one launcher, and thenfired the other rockets just as fast. The shells streaked into the Grunts’ formation and detonated. One ofthe stationary guns flipped over, engulfed in the blast, and the gunner was flung to the ground. She ditched the launcher, jumped down—rolled once—and was back on her feet, running at top speed tothe fallback point. The Chief, Blue-Three, and Blue-Five leaped to the top of the ridge. The Chief switched to infrared tocut through the clouds of dust and propellant exhaust just in time to see the second salvo ofJackhammers strike their targets. Two consecutive blossoms of flash, fire, and thunder decimated thefront ranks of the Grunt guards, and most importantly, turned the last of the plasma cannons intosmoldering wreckage. The Chief and the others opened fire with their MA5B assault rifles—a full automatic spray of fifteenrounds per second. Armor-piercing bullets tore into the aliens, breaching their environment suits andsparking the methane tanks they carried. Gouts of flame traced wild arcs as the wounded Grunts ran inconfusion and pain. Finally the Grunts realized what was happening—and where this attack was coming from. Theyregrouped and chargeden masse . An earthquake vibration coursed through the ground and shook theporous stone beneath the Chief’s boots. The three Spartans exhausted their AP clips and then, in unison, switched to shredder rounds. They firedinto the tide of creatures as they surged forward. Line after line of them dropped. Scores more justtrampled their fallen comrades. Explosive needles bounced off the Chief’s armor, detonating as they hit the ground. He saw the flash ofa plasma bolt—side stepped—and heard the air crackle where he had stood a split second before. “Inbound Covenant air support,”Blue-Four reported over the COM link.“ETA is two minutes, Chief.” “Roger that,” he said. “Blue-Three and -Five: maintain fire for five seconds, then fall back. Mark!” Their status lights winked once, acknowledging his order. The Grunts were three meters from the wall. The Chief tossed two grenades. He, Blue-Three, and Blue-Five stepped backward off the ridge, landed, spun, and ran. Two dull thumps reverberated though the ground. The squeals and barks of the incoming Grunts,however, drowned out the noise of the exploding grenades. The Chief and his team sprinted up the half-kilometer sandstone slope in thirty-two seconds flat. The hillended abruptly—a sheer drop of two hundred meters straight into the ocean. Blue-Four’s voice crackled over the COM channel:“Welcome mat is laid out, Chief. Ready when youare.” The Grunts looked like a living carpet of steel-blue skin, claws, and chrome weapons. Some ran on allfours up the slope. They barked and howled, baying for the Spartans’ blood. “Roll out the carpet,” the Chief told Blue-Four. The hill exploded—plumes of pulverized sandstone and fire and smoke hurtled skyward. The Spartans had buried a spiderweb pattern of Lotus antitank mines earlier that morning. Sand and bits of metal pinged off of the Chief’s helmet. The Chief and his team opened fire again, picking off the remaining Grunts that were still alive andstruggling to stand. His motion detector flashed a warning. There were incoming projectiles high at two o’clock—velocitiesat over a hundred kilometers per hour. Five Covenant Banshee fliers appeared over the ridge. “New contacts. All teams, open fire!” he barked. The Spartans, without hesitation, fired on the alien fliers. Bullet hits pinged from the fliers’ chitinousarmor—it would take a very lucky shot to take out the antigrav pods on the end of the craft’s stubbymeter-long “wings.” The fire got the aliens’ attention, however. Lances of fire slashed from the Banshees’ gunports. The Chief dove and rolled to his feet. Sandstone exploded where he had stood only an instant before. Globules of molten glass sprayed the Spartans. The Banshees screamed over their heads—then banked sharply for another pass. “Blue-Three, Blue-Five: Theta Maneuver,” the Chief called out. Blue-Three and -Five gave him the thumbs-up signal. They regrouped at the edge of the cliff and clipped onto the steel cables that dangled down the length ofthe rock wall. “Did you set up the fougasses with fire or shrapnel?” the Chief asked. “Both,” Blue-Three replied. “Good.” The Chief grabbed the detonators. “Cover me.” The fougasses were never meant to take down flying targets; the Spartans had put them there to mop upthe Grunts. In the field, though, you had to improvise. Another tenet of their training: adapt or die. The Banshees formed into a “flying V” and swooped toward them, almost brushing the ground. The Spartans opened fire. Bolts of superheated plasma from the Banshees punctuated the air. The Chief dodged to the right, then to the left; he ducked. Their aim was getting better. The Banshees were one hundred meters away, then fifty meters. Their plasma weapons might recyclefast enough to get another shot . . . and at this range, the Chief wouldn’t be dodging. The Spartans jumped backward off the cliff—guns still blazing. The Chief jumped, too, and hit thedetonators. The ten fougasses—each a steel barrel filled with napalm and spent AP and shredder casings—had beenburied a few meters from the edge of the cliff, their mouths angled up at thirty degrees. When thegrenades at the bottom of the barrels exploded, it made one hell of a barbecue out of anything that got intheir way. The Spartans slammed into the side of the cliff—the steel cables they were attached to twanged taut. A wave of heat and pressure washed over them. A heartbeat later five flaming Banshees hurtled overtheir heads, leaving thick trails of black smoke as they arced into the water. They splashed down, thenvanished beneath the emerald waves. The Spartans hung there a moment, waiting and watching withtheir assault rifles trained on the water. No survivors surfaced. They rappelled down to the beach and rendezvoused with Blue-Two and -Four. “Red Team reports mission objective achieved, Chief,” Blue-Two said. “They send their compliments.” “It’s hardly going to balance the scales,” Blue-Three muttered, and kicked the sand. “Not like thoseGrunts when they slaughtered the 105th drop Jet Platoon. They should suffer just as much as those guysdid.” The Chief had nothing to say to that. It wasn’t his job to make things suffer—he was just here to winbattles. Whatever it took. “Blue-Two,” the Chief said. “Get me an uplink.” “Aye aye.” She patched him into the SATCOM system. “Mission accomplished, Captain de Blanc,” the Chief reported. “Enemy neutralized.” “Excellent news,”the Captain said. He sighed, and added,“But we’re pulling you out, Chief.” “We’re just getting warmed up down here, sir.” “Well, it’s a different story up here. Move out for pickup ASAP.” “Understood, sir.” The Chief killed the uplink. He told his team, “The party’s over, Spartans. Dust-off infifteen.” They jogged double-quick up the ten kilometers of the beach, and returned to their dropship—a Pelican,scuffed and dented from three days’ hard fighting. They boarded and the ship’s engines whined to life. Blue-Two took off her helmet and scratched the stubble of her brown hair. “It’s a shame to leave thisplace,” she said, and leaned against the porthole. “There are so few left.” The Chief stood by her and glanced out as they lifted into the air—there were wide rolling plains ofpalmgrass, the green expanse of ocean, a wispy band of clouds in the sky, and setting red suns. “There will be other places to fight for,” he said. “Will there?” she whispered. The Pelican ascended rapidly through the atmosphere, the sky darkened, and soon only stars surroundedthem. In orbit, there were dozens of frigates, destroyers, and two massive carriers. Every ship had carbonscoring and holes peppering their hulls. They were all maneuvering to break orbit. They docked in the port bay of the UNSC destroyerResolute . Despite being surrounded by two metersof titanium-A battle plate and an array of modern weapons, the Chief preferred to have his feet on theground, with real gravity, and real atmosphere to breathe—a place where he was in control, and wherehis life wasn’t held in the hands of anonymous pilots. A ship just wasn’t home. The battlefield was. The Chief rode the elevator to the bridge to make his report, taking advantage of the momentary respiteto read Red Team’s after-action report in his display. As predicted, the Spartans of Red, Blue, and GreenTeams—augmenting three divisions of battle-hardened UNSC Marines—had stalled a Covenant groundadvance. Casualty figures were still coming in, but—on the ground, at least—the alien forces had beencompletely stonewalled. A moment later the lift doors parted, and he stepped on the rubberized deck. He snapped a crisp salute toCaptain de Blanc. “Sir. Reporting as ordered.” The junior bridge officers took a step back from the Chief. They weren’t used to seeing a Spartan in fullMJOLNIR armor up close—most line troops had never even seen a Spartan. The ghostly iridescentgreen of the armor plates and the matte black layers underneath made him look part gladiator, partmachine. Or perhaps to the bridge crew, he looked as alien as the Covenant. The view screens showed stars and Jerico VII’s four silver moons. At extreme range, a smallconstellation of stars drifted closer. The Captain waved the Chief closer as he stared at that cluster of stars—the rest of the battlegroup. “It’shappening again.” “Request permission to remain on the bridge, sir,” the Chief said. “I . . . want to see it this time, sir.” The Captain hung his head, looking weary. He glanced at the Master Chief with haunted eyes. “Verywell, Chief. After all you’ve been through to save Jericho Seven, we owe you that. We’re only thirtymillion kilometers out-system, though, not half as far as I’d like to be.” He turned to the NAV Officer. “Bearing one two zero. Prepare our exit vector.” He turned to face the Chief. “We’ll stay to watch . . . but if those bastards so much as twitch in ourdirection, we’re jumping the hell out of here.” “Understood, sir. Thank you.” Resolute’s engines rumbled and the ship moved off. Three dozen Covenant ships—big ones, destroyers and cruisers—winked into view in the system. Theywere sleek, looking more like sharks than starcraft. Their lateral lines brightened with plasma—thendischarged and rained fire down upon Jericho VII. The Chief watched for an hour and didn’t move a muscle. The planet’s lakes, rivers, and oceans vaporized. By tomorrow, the atmosphere would boil away, too. Fields and forests were glassy smooth and glowing red-hot in patches. Where there had once been a paradise, only hell remained. “Make ready to jump clear of the system,” the Captain ordered. The Chief continued to watch, his face grim. There had been ten years of this—the vast network of human colonies whittled down to a handful ofstrongholds by a merciless, implacable enemy. The Chief had killed the enemy on the ground—shotthem, stabbed them, and broken them with his own two hands. On the ground, the Spartansalways won. The problem was, the Spartans couldn’t take their fight into space. Every minor victory on the groundturned into a major defeat in orbit. Soon there would be no more colonies, no human settlements—and nowhere left to run. SECTION I REVEILLE Chapter 1   0430 Hours, August 17, 2517 (Military Calendar) / Slipstream space unknowncoordinates nearEridanus Star SystemLieutenant Junior Grade Jacob Keyes awoke. Dull red light filled his blurry vision and he choked on theslime in his lungs and throat. “Sit up, Lieutenant Keyes,” a disembodied male voice said. “Sit. Take a deep breath and cough, sir. Youneed to clear the bronchial surfactant.” Lieutenant Keyes pushed himself up, peeling his back off the formfitting gel bed. Wisps of fogoverflowed from the cryogenic tube as he clumsily climbed out. He sat on a nearby bench, tried toinhale, and doubled over, coughing until a long string of clear fluid flowed from his open mouth. He sat up and drew his first full breath in two weeks. He tasted his lips and almost gagged. The cryoinhalant was specially designed to be regurgitated and swallowed, replacing nutrients lost in the deepsleep. No matter how they changed the formula, though, it always tasted like lime-flavored mucus. “Status, Toran? Are we under attack?” “Negative, sir,” the ship’s AI replied. “Status normal. We will enter normal space near the EridanusSystem in forty-five minutes.” Lieutenant Keyes coughed again. “Good. Thank you, Toran.” “You’re welcome, Lieutenant.” Eridanus was on the border of the Outer Colonies. It was just far enough off the beaten path for piratesto be lurking . . . waiting to capture a diplomatic shuttle like theHan . This ship wouldn’t last long in aspace action. Theyshould have an escort. He didn’t understand why they had been sent alone—butJunior Lieutenants didn’t question orders. Especially when those orders came from FLEETCOM HQ onplanet Reach. Wake-up protocols dictated that he inspect the rest of the crew to make sure no one had run intoproblems reviving. He looked around the sleep chamber: rows of stainless steel lockers and showers, amedical pod for emergency resuscitations, and forty cryogenic tubes—all empty except the one to hisleft. The other person on theHan was the civilian specialist, Dr. Halsey. Keyes had been ordered to protecther at all costs, pilot this ship, and generally stay the hell out of her way. They might as well have askedhim to hold her hand. This wasn’t a military mission; it was baby-sitting. Someone at Fleet Commandmust have him on their blacklist. The cover of Dr. Halsey’s tube hummed open. Mist rippled out as she sat up, coughing. Her pale skinmade her look like a ghost in the fog. Matted locks of dark hair clung to her neck. She didn’t look mucholder than him, and she was lovely—not beautiful, but definitely a striking woman. For a civilian,anyway. Her blue eyes fixed upon the Lieutenant and she looked him over. “We must be near Eridanus,” she said. Lieutenant Keyes almost saluted reflectively, but checked the motion. “Yes, Doctor.” His face reddenedand he looked away from her slender body. He had drilled in cryogenic recovery a dozen times at the Academy. He’d seen his fellow officers nakedbefore—men and women. But Dr. Halsey was a civilian. He didn’t know what protocols applied. Lieutenant Keyes got up and went to her. “Can I help you—” She swung her legs out of the tube and climbed out. “I’m fine, Lieutenant. Get cleaned up and dressed.” She brushed past him and strode to the showers. “Hurry. We have important work to do.” Lieutenant Keyes stood straighter. “Aye, aye, Ma’am.” With that brief encounter, their roles and the rules of conduct crystallized. Civilian or not—like it or not—Lieutenant Keyes understood that Dr. Halsey was in charge. The bridge of theHan had an abundance of space for a vessel of its size. That is, it had all themaneuvering room of a walk-in closet. A freshly showered, shaved, and uniformed Lieutenant Keyespulled himself into the room and sealed the pressure door behind him. Every surface of the bridge wascovered with monitors and screens. The wall on his left was a single large semicurved view screen, darkfor the moment because there was nothing in the visible spectrum to see in Slipspace. Behind him was theHan ’s spinning center section, containing the mess, the rec room, and the sleepchambers. There was no gravity on the bridge, however. The diplomatic shuttle had been designed forthe comfort of its passengers, not the crew. It didn’t seem to bother Dr. Halsey. Strapped into the navigator’s couch, she wore a white jumpsuit thatmatched her pale skin, and had tied her dark hair into a simple, elegant knot. Her fingers danced acrossfour keypads, tapping in commands. “Welcome, Lieutenant,” she said without looking up. “Please have a seat at the communication stationand monitor the channels when we enter normal space. If there’s so much as a squeak on nonstandardfrequencies, I want to know instantly.” He drifted to the communication station and strapped himself down. “Toran?” she asked. “Awaiting your orders, Dr. Halsey,” the ship AI replied. “Give me astrogation maps of the system.” “Online, Dr. Halsey.” “Are there any planets currently aligned with our entry trajectory and Eridanus Two? I want to pick up agravitational boost so we can move in-system ASAP.” “Calculating now, Doctor Hal—” “And can we have some music? Rachmaninov’s Piano Concerto Number Three, I think.” “Understood Doctor—” “And start a preburn warm-up cycle for the fusion engines.” “Yes, Doc—” “And stop spinning theHan ’s central carousel section. We may need the power.” “Working . . . ” She eased back. The music started and she sighed. “Thank you, Toran.” “You’re welcome, Dr. Halsey. Entering normal space in five minutes, plus or minus three minutes.” Lieutenant Keyes shot the doctor an admiring glance. He was impressed—few people could put ashipboard AI through its paces so rigorously as to cause a detectable pause. She turned to face him. “Yes, Lieutenant? You have a question?” He composed himself and pulled his uniform jacket taut. “I was curious about our mission, ma’am. Iassume we are to reconnoiter something in this system, but why send a shuttle, rather than a prowler or acorvette? And why just the two of us?” She blinked and smiled. “A fairly accurate assumption and analysis, Lieutenant. Thisis a reconnaissancemission . . . of sorts. We are here to observe a child. The first of many, I hope.” “A child?” “A six-year-old male, to be precise.” She waved her hand. “It may help if you think of this purely as aUNSC-funded physiological study.” Every trace of a smile evaporated from her lips. “Which is preciselywhat you are to tell anyone who asks. Is that understood, Lieutenant?” “Yes, Doctor.” Keyes frowned, retrieved his grandfather’s pipe from his pocket, and turned it end over end. He couldn’tsmoke the thing—igniting a combustible on the flight deck was against every major regulation on aUNSC space vehicle—but sometimes he just fiddled with it or chewed on the tip, which helped himthink. He stuck it back into his pocket, and decided to push the issue and find out more. “With all due respect, Dr. Halsey, this sector of space is dangerous.” With a sudden deceleration, they entered normal space. The main view screen flickered and a millionstars snapped into focus. TheHan dove toward a cloud-swirled gas giant dead ahead. “Stand by for burn,” Dr. Halsey announced. “On my mark, Toran.” Lieutenant Keyes tightened his harness. “Three . . . two . . . one.Mark. ” The ship rumbled and sped faster toward the gas giant. The pull of the harness increased around theLieutenant’s chest, making breathing difficult. They accelerated for sixty-seven seconds . . . the stormsof the gas giant grew larger on the view screen—then theHan arced up and away from its surface. Eridanus drifted into the center of the screen and filled the bridge with warm orange light. “Gravity boost complete,” Toran chimed. “ETA to Eridanus is forty-two minutes, three seconds.” “Well done,” Dr. Halsey said. She unlocked her harness and floated free, stretching. “I hate cryo sleep,” she said. “It leaves one so cramped.” “As I was saying before, Doctor, this system is dangerous—” She gracefully spun to face him, halting her momentum with a hand on the bulkhead. “Oh yes, I knowhow dangerous this system is. It has a colorful history: rebel insurrection in 2494, beaten down by theUNSC two years later at the cost of four destroyers.” She thought a moment, then added, “I don’tbelieve the Office of Naval Intelligence ever found their base in the asteroid field. And since there havebeen organized raids and scattered pirate activity nearby, one might conclude—as ONI clearly has—thatthe remnants of the original rebel faction are still active. Is that that what you were worried about?” “Yes,” the Lieutenant replied. He swallowed, his mouth suddenly dry, but he refused to be cowed by thedoctor—by acivilian . “I need hardly remind you that it’s my job to worry about our security.” She knew more than he did, much more, about the Eridanus System—and she obviously had contacts inthe intelligence community. Keyes had never seen an ONI spook—to the best of his knowledge anyway. Mainline Navy personnel had elevated such agents to near-mythological status. Whatever else he thought of Dr. Halsey, he would assume from now on that she knew what she wasdoing. Dr. Halsey stretched once more and then strapped herself back onto the navigation couch. “Speaking ofpirates,” she said with her back now to him, “weren’t you supposed to be monitoring communicationchannels for illegal signals? Just in case someone takes undue interest in a lone, unescorted, diplomaticshuttle?” Lieutenant Keyes cursed himself for his momentary lapse and snapped to. He scanned all frequenciesand had Toran cross-check their authentication codes. “All signals verified,” he reported. “No pirate transmissions detected.” “Continue to monitor them, please.” An awkward thirty minutes passed. Dr. Halsey was content to read reports on the navigational screens,and kept her back to him. Lieutenant Keyes finally cleared his throat. “May I speak candidly, Doctor?” “You don’t need my permission,” she said. “By all means, speak candidly, Lieutenant. You’ve beendoing a fine job so far.” Under normal circumstances, among normal officers, that last remark would have been insubordination—or worse, a rebuke. But he let it pass. Normal military protocols seemed to have been jettisoned onthis flight. “You said we were here to observe a child.” He shook his head dubiously. “If this is a cover for realmilitary intelligence work, then, to tell the truth, there are better-qualified officers for this mission. Igraduated from UNSC OCS only seven weeks ago. My orders had me rotated to theMagellan . Thoseorders were rescinded, ma’am.” She turned and scrutinized him with icy blue eyes. “Go on, Lieutenant.” He reached for his pipe, but then checked the motion. She would probably think it a silly habit. “If this is an intel op,” he said, “then . . . then I don’t understand why I’m here at all.” She leaned forward. “Then, Lieutenant, I shall be equally candid.” Something deep inside Lieutenant Keyes told him he would regret hearing whatever Dr. Halsey had tosay. He ignored the feeling. He wanted to know the truth. “Go ahead, Doctor.” Her slight smile returned. “You are here because Vice Admiral Stanforth, head of Section Three ofUNSC Military Intelligence Division, refused to lend me this shuttle without at least one UNSC officeraboard—even though he knows damn well that I can pilot this bucket by myself. So I picked one UNSCofficer. You.” She tapped her lower lip thoughtfully and added, “You see, I’ve read your file,Lieutenant. All of it.” “I don’t know—” “Youdo know what I’m talking about.” She rolled her eyes. “You don’t lie well. Don’t insult me bytrying again.” Lieutenant Keyes swallowed. “Then why me?Especially if you’ve seen my record?” “I chose you preciselybecause of your record—because of the incident in your second year at OCS. Fourteen ensigns killed. You were wounded and spent two months in rehabilitation. Plasma burns areparticularly painful, I understand.” He rubbed his hands together. “Yes.” “The Lieutenant responsible was your CO on that training mission. You refused to testify against himdespite overwhelming evidence and the testimony of his fellow officers . . . and friends.” “Yes.” “They told the board of review the secret the Lieutenant had entrusted to you all—that he was going totest his new theory to make Slipspace jumps more accurate. He was wrong, and you all paid for hiseagerness and poor mathematics.” Lieutenant Keyes studied his hands and had the feeling of falling inward. Dr. Halsey’s voice soundeddistant. “Yes.” “Despite continuing pressure, you never testified. They threatened to demote you, charge you withinsubordination and refusing a direct order—even discharge you from the Navy. “Your fellow officer candidates testified, though. The review board had all the evidence they needed tocourt-martial your CO. They put you on report and dropped all further disciplinary actions.” He said nothing. His head hung low. “That is why you are here, Lieutenant—because you have an ability that is exceedingly rare in themilitary. You can keep a secret.” She drew in a long breath and added, “You may have to keep manysecrets after this mission is over.” He glanced up. There was a strange look in her eyes. Pity? That caught him off guard and he lookedaway again. But he felt better than he had since OCS. Someone trusted him again. “I think,” she said, “that you would rather be on theMagellan . Fighting and dying on the frontier.” “No, I—” He caught the lie as he said it, stopped, then corrected himself. “Yes. The UNSC needs everyman and woman patrolling the Outer Colonies. Between the raiders and insurrections, it’s a wonder it allhasn’t fallen apart.” “Indeed, Lieutenant, ever since we left Earth’s gravity, well, we’ve been fighting one another for everycubic centimeter of vacuum—from Mars to the Jovian Moons to the Hydra System Massacres and on tothe hundred brushfire wars in the Outer Colonies. It has always been on the brink of falling apart. That’swhy we’re here.” “To observe one child,” he said. “What difference could a child make?” One of her eyebrows arched. “This child could be more useful to the UNSC than a fleet of destroyers, athousand Junior Grade Lieutenants—or evenme . In the end, the child may be the only thing thatmakesany difference.” “Approaching Eridanus Two,” Toran informed them. “Plot an atmospheric vector for the Luxor spaceport,” Dr. Halsey ordered. “Lieutenant Keyes, makeready to land.” Chapter 2 1130 Hours, August 17, 2517 (Military Calendar) /Eridanus Star System, Eridanus 2, Elysium CityThe orange sun cast a fiery glow on the playground of Elysium City Primary Education Facility No. 119. Dr. Halsey and Lieutenant Keyes stood in the semishade of a canvas awning and watched children asthey screamed and chased one another and climbed on steel lattices and skimmed gravballs across therepulsor courts. Lieutenant Keyes looked extremely uncomfortable in civilian clothes. He wore a loose gray suit, a whiteshirt, and no tie. Dr. Halsey found his sudden awkwardness charming. When he had complained the clothes were too loose and sloppy, she had almost laughed. He was puremilitary to the core. Even out of uniform, the Lieutenant stood rigid, as if he were at perpetual attention. “It’s nice here,” she said. “This colony doesn’t know how good they’ve got it. Rural lifestyle. Nopollution. No crowding. Climate-controlled weather.” The Lieutenant grunted an acknowledgment as he tried to smooth the wrinkles out of his silk jacket. “Relax,” she said. “We’re supposed to be parents inspecting the school for our little girl.” She slippedher arm through his, and although she would have thought such a feat impossible, the Lieutenant stoodeven straighter. She sighed and pulled away from him, opened her purse, and retrieved a palm-sized pad. She adjustedthe brim of her wide straw hat to shade the pad from the noon glare. With a tap of her finger, sheaccessed and scanned the file she had assembled of their subject. Number 117 had all the genetic markers she had flagged in her original study—he was as close to aperfect subject for her purposes as science could determine. But Dr. Halsey knew it would take morethan theoretical perfection to make this project work. People were more than the sum of their genes. There were environmental factors, mutations, learned ethics, and a hundred other factors that couldmake this candidate unacceptable. The picture in the file showed a typical six-year-old male. He had tousled brown hair and a sly grin thatrevealed a gap between his front teeth. A few freckles were speckled across his checks. Good—shecould match the patterns to confirm his identity. “Our subject.” As she angled the pad toward the Lieutenant so he could see the boy, Dr. Halsey noticedthat the picture was four months old. Didn’t ONI realize how fast these children changed? Sloppy. Shemade a note to request updated pictures on a regular basis until phase three started. “Is that him?” the Lieutenant whispered. Dr. Halsey looked up. The Lieutenant nodded to a grassy hill at the end of the playground. The crest of that hill was bare dirt,scuffed clean of all vegetation. A dozen boys pushed and shoved one another—grabbed, tackled, rolleddown the slope, and then got up, ran back, and started the process over. “King of the hill,” Dr. Halsey remarked. One boy stood on the crest. He blocked, pushed, and strong-armed all the other children. Dr. Halsey pointed her data pad at him and recorded this incident for later study. She zoomed in on thesubject to get a better look. This boy smiled and showed the same small gap between his front teeth. Asplit-second freeze frame and she matched his freckles to the picture on file. “That’s our boy.” He was taller than the other children by a full head, and—if his performance in the game was anyindicator—stronger as well. Another boy grabbed him from behind in a headlock. Number 117 peeledthe boy off, and—with a laugh—tossed him down the hillside like a toy. Dr. Halsey had expected a specimen of perfect physical proportions and stunning intellect. True, thesubject was strong and fast, but he was also dirty and rude. Then again, unrealistic and subjective perceptions had to be confronted in these field studies. What didshe really expect? He was a six-year-old boy—full of life and unchecked emotion and as predictable asthe wind. Three boys ganged up on him. Two grabbed his legs and one threw his arms around his chest. They alltumbled down the hill. Number 117 kicked and punched and bit his attackers until they let go and ranaway to a safe distance. He rose and tore back up the hill, bumping another boy and shouting that he wasking. “He seems,” the Lieutenant started, “um, very animated.” “Yes,” Dr. Halsey said. “We may be able to use this one.” She glanced up and down the playground. The only adult was helping a girl get to her feet after fallingdown and scraping her elbow; she marched her towards the nurse’s office. “Stay here and watch me, Lieutenant,” she said, and passed him the data pad. “I’m going to have acloser look.” The Lieutenant started to say something, but Dr. Halsey walked away, then half jogged across thepainted lines of hopscotch squares on the playground. A breeze caught her sundress and she had toclutch the hem with one hand, grabbing the brim of her straw hat with the other. She slowed to a trot andhalted four meters from the base of the hill. The children stopped and turned. “You’re in trouble,” one boy said, and pushed Number 117. He shoved the boy back and then looked Dr. Halsey squarely in the eyes. The other children lookedaway; some wore embarrassed smirks, and a few slowly backed off. Her subject, however, stood there defiantly. He was either confident she wasn’t going to punish him—orhe simply wasn’t afraid. She saw that he had a bruise on his cheek, the knees of his pants were torn, andhis lip was cracked. Dr. Halsey took three steps closer. Several of the children took three involuntary steps backward. “Can I speak with you, please?” she asked, and continued to stare at her subject. He finally broke eye contact, shrugged, and then lumbered down the hill. The other children giggled andmade tsking sounds; one tossed a pebble at him. Number 117 ignored them. Dr. Halsey led him to the edge of the nearby sandpit and stopped. “What’s your name?” she asked. “I’m John,” he said. The boy held out his hand. Dr. Halsey didn’t expect physical contact. The subject’s father must have taught him the ritual, or theboy was highly imitative. She shook his hand and was surprised by the strength in his miniscule grip. “It’s very nice to meet you.” She knelt so she was at his level. “I wanted to ask you what you were doing?” “Winning,” he said. Dr. Halsey smiled. He was unafraid of her . . . and she doubted that he’d have any trouble pushing heroff the hill, either. “You like games,” she said. “So do I.” He sighed. “Yeah, but they made me play chess last week. That got boring. It’s too easy to win.” Hetook a quick breath. “Or—can we play gravball? They don’t let me play gravball anymore, but maybe ifyou tell them it’s okay?” “I have a different game I want you to try,” she told him. “Look.” She reached into her purse andbrought out a metal disk. She turned it over and it gleamed in the sun. “People used coins like this forcurrency a long time ago, when Earth was the only planet we lived on.” His eyes fixed on the object. He reached for it. Dr. Halsey moved it away, continuing to flip it between her thumb and index finger. “Each side isdifferent. Do you see? One has the face of a man with long hair. The other side has a bird, called aneagle, and it’s holding—” “Arrows,” John said. “Yes. Good.” His eyesight must be exceptional to see such detail so far away. “We’ll use this coin in ourgame. If you win you can keep it.” John tore his gaze from the coin and looked at her again, squinted, then said, “Okay. I always win,though. That’s why they won’t let me play gravball anymore.” “I’m sure you do.” “What’s the game?” “It’s very simple. I toss the coin like this.” She flicked her wrist, snapped her thumb, and the coin arced,spinning into the air, and landed in the sand. “Next time, though, before it lands, I want you to tell me ifit will fall with the face of the man showing or with the eagle holding the arrows.” “I got it.” John tensed, bent his knees, and then his eyes seemed to lose their focus on her and the coin. Dr. Halsey picked up the quarter. “Ready?” John gave a slight nod. She tossed it, making sure there was plenty of spin. John’s eyes watched it with that strange distant gaze. He tracked it as it went up, and then down towardthe ground—his hand snapped out and snatched the quarter out of the air. He held up his closed hand. “Eagle!” he shouted. She tentatively reached for his hand and peeled open the tiny fist. The quarter lay in his palm: the eagle shining in the orange sun. Was it possible that he saw which side was up when he grabbed it . . . or more improbably, could havepicked which side he wanted? She hoped the Lieutenant had recorded that. She should have told him tokeep the data pad trained on her. John retracted his hand. “I get to keep it, right? That’s what you said.” “Yes, you can keep it, John.” She smiled at him—then stopped. She shouldn’t have used his name. That was a bad sign. She couldn’t afford the luxury ofliking her testsubjects. She mentally stepped away from her feelings. She had to maintain a professional distance. Shehad to . . . because in a few months Number 117 might not be alive. “Can we play again?” Dr. Halsey stood and took a step back. “That was the only one I had, I’m afraid. I have to leave now,” she told him. “Go back and play with your friends.” “Thanks.” He ran back, shouting to the other boys, “Look!” Dr. Halsey strode to the Lieutenant. The sun reflecting off the asphalt felt too hot, and she suddenlydidn’t want to be outside. She wanted to be back in the ship, where it was cool and dark. She wanted toget off this planet. She stepped under the canvas awning and said to the Lieutenant, “Tell me you recorded that.” He handed her the data pad and looked puzzled. “Yes. What was it all about?’ Dr. Halsey checked the recording and then sent a copy ahead to Toran on theHan for safekeeping. “We screen these subjects for certain genetic markers,” she said. “Strength, agility, even predispositionsfor aggression and intellect. But we couldn’t remote test for everything. We don’t test for luck.” “Luck?” Lieutenant Keyes asked. “You believe in luck, Doctor?” “Of course not,” she said with a dismissive wave of her hand. “But we have one hundred and fifty testsubjects to consider, and facilities and funding for only half that number. It’s a simple mathematicalelimination, Lieutenant. That child was one of the lucky ones—either that or he is extraordinarily fast. Either way, he’s in.” “I don’t understand,” Lieutenant Keyes said, and he started fiddling with the pipe he carried in hispocket. “I hope that continues, Lieutenant, ” Dr. Halsey replied quietly. “For your sake, I hope you neverunderstand what we’re doing.” She looked one last time at Number 117—at John. He was having so much fun, running and laughing. For a moment she envied the boy’s innocence; hers was long dead. Life or death, lucky or not, she wascondemning this boy to a great deal of pain and suffering. But it had to be done. Chapter 3 2300 Hours September 23, 2517 (Military Calendar ) / Epsilon Eridani System, Reach MilitaryComplex,planet ReachDr. Halsey stood on a platform in the center of the amphitheater. Concentric rings of slate-gray riserssurrounded her—empty for now. Overhead spotlights focused and reflected off her white lab coat, butshe still was cold. She should feel safe here. Reach was one of the UNSC’s largest industrial bases, ringed with high-orbitgun batteries, space docks, and a fleet of heavily-armed capital ships. On the planet’s surface wereMarine and Navy Special Warfare training grounds, OCS schools, and between her undergroundfacilities and the surface were three hundred meters of hardened steel and concrete. The room where shenow stood could withstand a direct hit from an 80-megaton nuke. So why did she feel so vulnerable? Dr. Halsey knew what she had to do. Her duty. It was for the greater good. All humanity would beserved . . . even if a tiny handful of them had to suffer for it. Still, when she turned inward and faced hercomplicity in this—she was revolted by what she saw. She wished she still had Lieutenant Keyes. He had proven himself a capable assistant during the lastmonth. But he had begun to understand the nature of the project—at least seen the edges of the truth. Dr. Halsey had him reassigned to theMagellan with a commission to full Lieutenant for his troubles. “Are you ready, Doctor?” a disembodied woman’s voice asked. “Almost, Déjà.” Dr. Halsey sighed. “Please summon Chief Petty Officer Mendez. I’d like you bothpresent when I address them.” Déjà’s hologram flicked on next to Dr. Halsey. The AI had been specifically created for Dr. Halsey’sSPARTAN project. She took the appearance of a Greek goddess: barefoot, wrapped in the toga, motes oflight dancing about her luminous white hair. She held a clay tablet in her left hand. Binary cuneiformmarkings scrolled across the tablet. Dr. Halsey couldn’t help but marvel at the AI’s chosen form; eachAI “self-assigned” a holographic appearance, and each was unique. One of the doors at the top of the amphitheater opened and Chief Petty Officer Mendez strode down thestairs. He wore a black dress uniform, his chest awash with silver and gold stars and a rainbow ofcampaign ribbons. His close-shorn hair had a touch of gray at the temples. He was neither tall normuscular; he looked so ordinary for a man who had seen so much combat . . . except for his stride. Theman moved with a slow grace as if he were walking in half gravity. He paused before Dr. Halsey,awaiting further instructions. “Up here, please,” she told him, gesturing to the stairs on her right. Mendez mounted the steps of the platform and then stood at ease next to her. “You have read my psychological evaluations?” Déjà asked Dr. Halsey. “Yes. They were quite thorough,” she said. “Thank you.” “And?” “I’m forgoing your recommendations, Déjà. I’m going to tell them the truth.” Mendez gave a nearly inaudible grunt of approval—one of the most verbose acknowledgments Dr. Halsey had heard from him. As a hand-to-hand combat and physical-training DI, Mendez was the best inthe Navy. As a conversationalist, however, he left a great deal to be desired. “The truth has risks,” Déjà cautioned. “So do lies,” Dr. Halsey replied. “Any story fabricated to motivate the children—claiming their parentswere taken and killed by pirates, or by a plague that devastated their planet—if they learned the truthlater, they would turn against us.” “It is a legitimate concern,” conceded Déjà, and then she consulted her tablet. “May I suggest selectiveneural paralysis? It produces a targeted amnesia—” “A memory loss that may leak into other parts of the brain. No,” Dr. Halsey said, “this will be dangerousenough for them even with intact minds.” Dr. Halsey clicked on her microphone. “Bring them in now.” “Aye aye,” a voice replied from the speakers in the ceiling. “They’ll adapt,” Dr. Halsey told Déjà. “Or they won’t, and they will be untrainable and unsuitable forthe project. Either way I just want to get this over with.” Four sets of double doors at the top tier of the amphitheater swung open. Seventy-five children marchedin—each accompanied by a handler, a Naval drill instructor in camouflage pattern fatigues. The children had circles of fatigue around their eyes. They had all been collected, rushed here throughSlipstream space, and only recently brought out of cryo sleep. The shock of their ordeal must be hittingthem hard, Halsey realized. She stifled a pang of regret. When they had been seated in the risers, Dr. Halsey cleared her throat and spoke: “As per Naval Code45812, you are hereby conscripted into the UNSC Special Project, codenamed SPARTAN II.” She paused; the words stuck in her windpipe. How could they possibly understand this?She barelyunderstood the justifications and ethics behind this program. They looked so confused. A few tried to stand and leave, but their handlers placed firm hands on theirshoulders and pushed them back down. Six years old . . . this was too much for them to digest. But she had to make them understand, explain itin simple terms that they could grasp. Dr. Halsey took a tentative step forward. “You have been called upon to serve,” she explained. “Youwill be trained . . . and you will become the best we can make of you. You will be the protectors of Earthand all her colonies.” A handful of the children sat up straighter, no longer entirely frightened, but now interested. Dr. Halsey spotted John, subject Number 117, the first boy she had confirmed as a viable candidate. Hewrinkled his forehead, confused, but he listened with rapt attention. “This will be hard to understand, but you cannot return to your parents.” The children stirred. Their handlers kept a firm grip on their shoulders. “This place will become your home,” Dr. Halsey said in as soothing a voice as she could muster. “Yourfellow trainees will be your family now. The training will be difficult. There will be a great deal ofhardship on the road ahead, but I know you will all make it.” Patriotic words, but they rang hollow in her ears. She had wanted to tell them the truth—but how couldshe? Not all of them would make it. “Acceptable losses,” the Office of Naval Intelligence representative hadassured her. None of it was acceptable. “Rest now,” Dr. Halsey said to them. “We begin tomorrow.” She turned to Mendez. “Have the children . . . the trainees escorted to their barracks. Feed them and putthem to bed.” “Yes, ma’am,” Mendez said. “Fall out!” he shouted. The children rose—at the urging of their handlers. John 117 stood, but he kept his gaze on Dr. Halseyand remained stoic. Many of the subjects seemed stunned, a few had trembling lips—but none of themcried. These were indeed the right children for the project. Dr. Halsey only hoped that she had half theircourage when the time came. “Keep them busy tomorrow,” she told Mendez and Déjà. “Keep them from thinking about what we’vejust done to them.” SECTION II BOOT Chapter 4 0530 Hours, September 24, 2517 (Military Calendar) / Epsilon Eridani System, Reach MilitaryComplex,planet Reach“Wake up, trainee!” John rolled over in his cot and went back to sleep. He was dimly aware that this wasn’t his room, andthat there were other people here. A shock jolted him—from his bare feet to the base of his spine. He yelled in surprise and fell off the cot. He shook off the disorientation from being nearly asleep and got up. “I saidup , boot! You know which wayup is?” A man in a camouflage uniform stood over John. His hair was shorn and gray at his temples. His darkeyes didn’t look human—too big and black and they didn’t blink. He held a silver baton in one hand; heflicked it toward John and it sparked. John backed away. He wasn’t afraid of anything. Only little kids were afraid . . . but his bodyinstinctively moved as far away from the instrument as possible. Dozens of other men roused the rest of the children. Seventy-four boys and girls screamed and jumpedout of their cots. “I am Chief Petty Officer Mendez,” the uniformed man next to John shouted. “The rest of these men areyour instructors. You will do exactly as we tell you at all times.” Mendez pointed to the far end of the cinderblock barracks. “Showers are aft. You will all wash and thenreturn here to dress.” He opened a trunk at the foot of John’s cot and pulled out a matching set of graysweats. John leaned closer and saw his name stenciled on the chest: JOHN-117. “No slacking. On the double!” Mendez tapped John between his shoulder blades with the baton. Lightning surged across John’s chest. He sprawled on the cot and gasped for breath. “I mean it! Go Go GO!” John moved. He couldn’t inhale—but he ran anyway, clutching his chest. He managed a ragged breathby the time he got to the showers. The other kids looked scared and disoriented. They all stripped offtheir nightshirts and stepped onto the conveyor, washed themselves in lukewarm soapy water, thenrinsed in an icy cold spray. He ran back to his bunk, got into underwear, thick socks, pulled on the sweats and a pair of combatboots that fit his feet perfectly. “Outside, trainees,” Mendez announced. “Triple time . . .march! ” John and the others stampeded out of the barracks onto a strip of grass. The sun hadn’t risen yet, and the edge of the sky was indigo. The grass was wet with dew. There weredozens of rows of barracks, but no one else was up and outside. A pair of jets roared overhead and arcedup into the sky. Far away, John heard a metallic crackle. Chief Petty Officer Mendez barked, “You will make five equal-length rows. Fifteen trainees in each.” He waited a few seconds as they milled about. “Straighten those rows. You know how to count tofifteen, trainee? Take three steps back.” John stepped into the second row. As he breathed the cold air he began to wake up. He started to remember. They had taken him in themiddle of the night. They injected him with something and he slept for a long time. Then the womanwho had given him the coin told him he couldn’t go back. That he wouldn’t see his mother or father—“Jumping jacks!” Mendez shouted. “Count off to one hundred. Ready, go.” The officer started theexercise and John followed his lead. One boy refused—for a split-second. An instructor was on him instantly. The baton whipped into theboy’s stomach. The kid doubled over. “Get with the program, boot,” the trainer snarled. The boyuncurled and started jumping. John had never done so many jumping jacks in his life. His arms and stomach and legs burned. Sweattrickled down his back. “Ninety-eight—99—100.” Mendez paused. He drew in a deep breath. “Sit-ups!” He dropped onto thegrass. “Count off to one hundred. No slacking.” John threw himself on the ground. “The first crewmen who quits,” Mendez said, “gets to run around the compound twice—and then comesback here and does two hundred sit ups. Ready . . . count off! One . . . two . . . three. . . .” Deep squats followed. Then knee bends. John threw up, but that didn’t buy him any respite. A trainer descended on him after a few seconds. Johnrolled back over and continued. “Leg lifts.” Mendez continued like he was a machine. As if they all were machines. John couldn’t go on—but he knew he’d get the baton again if he stopped. He tried; he had to move. Hislegs trembled and only sluggishly responded. “Rest,” Mendez finally called. “Trainers: get the water.” The trainers wheeled out carts laden with water bottles. John grabbed one and gulped down the liquid. Itwas warm and slightly salty. He didn’t care. It was the best water he’d ever had. He flopped on his back in the grass and panted. The sun was up now. It was warm. He rolled to his knees and let the sweat drip off him like a heavy rain. He slowly got up and glanced at the other children. They crouched on the ground, holding their sides,and no one talked. Their clothes were soaked through with perspiration. John didn’t recognize anyonefrom his school here. So he was alone with strangers. He wondered where his mother was, and what—“A good start, trainees,” Mendez told them. “Now we run. On your feet!” The trainers brandished their batons and herded the trainees along. They jogged down a gravel paththrough the compound, past more cinderblock barracks. The run seemed to go on forever—they ranalongside a river, over a bridge, then by the edge of a runway where jets took off straight into the air. Once past the runway, Mendez led them on a zigzagging path of stone. John wanted to think about what had happened, how he got here, and what was going to happen next . . . but he couldn’t think straight. All he could feel was the blood pounding through him, the ache in hismuscles, and hunger. They ran into a courtyard of smooth flagstones. A pole in the center flew the colors of the UNSC, a bluefield with stars and Earth in the corner. At the far end of the yard was a building with a scalloped domeand white columns and dozens of wide steps leading to the entrance. The words NAVAL OFFICERSACADEMY were chiseled into the arch over the entrance. A woman stood on the top step and beckoned to them. She wore a white sheet wrapped around her body. She looked old to John, yet young at the same time. Then he saw the motes of light orbiting her head andknew she was an AI. He had seen them on vids. She wasn’t solid, but she was still real. “Excellent work, Chief Petty Officer Mendez,” she said in a resonant, silk-smooth voice. She turned tothe children. “Welcome. My name is Déjà and I will be your teacher. Please come in. Class is about tostart.” John groaned out loud. Several of the others grumbled, too. She turned and started to walk inside. “Of course,” she said, “if you prefer to skip your lessons, you maycontinue the morning calisthenics.” John double-timed it up the steps. It was cool inside. A tray with crackers and a carton of milk had been laid out for each of them. Johnnibbled on the dry stale food, then gulped down his milk. John was so tired he wanted to lay his head down on the desk and take a nap—until Déjà started to tellthem about a battle and how three hundred soldiers fought against thousands of Persian infantry. A holographic countryside appeared in the classroom. The children walked around the miniaturemountains and hills and let the edge of the illusionary sea lap at their boots. Toy-sized soldiers marchedtoward what Déjà explained was Thermopylae, a narrow strip of land between steep mountains and thesea. Thousands of soldiers marched toward the three hundred who guarded the pass. The soldiers fought: spears and shields splintered, swords flashed and spilled blood. John couldn’t take his eyes off the spectacle. Déjà explained that the three hundred were Spartans and they were the best soldiers who had ever lived. They had been trained to fight since they were children. No one could beat them. John watched, fascinated, as the holographic Spartans slaughtered the Persian spearmen. He had eaten his crackers but he was still hungry, so he took the girl’s next to him when she wasn’tlooking, and munched them down as the battle raged on. His stomach still growled and grumbled. When was lunch? Or was it dinnertime already? The Persians broke and ran and the Spartans stood victorious on the field. The children cheered. They wanted to see it again. “That’s all for today,” Déjà said. “We’ll continue tomorrow and I’ll show you some wolves. Now it’stime for you to go to the playground.” “Playground?” John said. That was perfect. He could finally just sit on a swing, relax, and think for amoment. He ran out of the room, as did the other trainees. Chief Petty Officer Mendez and the trainers waited for them outside the classroom. “Time for the playground,” Mendez said, and waved the children closer. “It’s a short run. Fall in.” The “short run” turned into two miles. And the playground was like nothing John had ever seen. It was aforest of twenty-meter tall wooden poles. Rope cargo nets and bridges stretched between the poles; theyswayed, crossed and crisscrossed one another, a maze suspended in the air. There were slide poles andknotted climbing ropes. There were swings and suspended platforms. There were ropes looped throughpulleys and tied to baskets that looked sturdy enough to hoist a person. “Trainees,” Mendez said, “form three lines.” The instructors moved in to herd them, but John and the others made three rows without comment orfuss. “The first person in every row will be team number one,” Mendez said. “The second person in each rowwill be team number two . . . and so on. If you do not understand this, speak up now.” No one spoke. John looked to his right. A boy with sandy hair, green eyes, and darkly tanned skin gave him a wearysmile. Stenciled on his sweat top was SAMUEL-034. In the row beyond Samuel was a girl. She wastaller than John, and skinny, with a long mane of hair dyed blue. KELLY-087. She didn’t look too happyto see him. “Today’s game,” Mendez explained, “is called ‘Ring the Bell.’ ” He pointed to the tallest pole on theplayground. It stood an additional ten meters above the others and had a steel slide pole next to it. Hungat the very top of that pole was a brass bell. “There are many ways to get to the bell,” he told them. “I leave it up to each team to find their own way. When every member of your team has rung the bell, you are to get groundside double time and run backhere across this finish line.” Mendez took his baton and scratched a straight line in the sand. John raised his hand. Mendez glared at him for a moment with those black unblinking eyes. “A question, Trainee?” “What do we win?” Mendez cocked one eyebrow and appraised John. “You win dinner, Number 117. Tonight, dinner isroast turkey, gravy and mashed potatoes, corn on the cob, brownies, and ice cream.” A murmur of approval swept though the children. “But,” Mendez added, “for there to be winners there must be a loser. The last team to finish goeswithout food.” They children fell silent—and then looked at each other warily. “Make ready,” Mendez said. “I’m Sam,” the boy whispered to John and the girl on their team. She said, “I’m Kelly.” John just looked at them and said nothing. The girl would slow him down. Too bad. He was hungry andhe wasn’t about to let them make him lose. “Go!” Mendez shouted. John ran through the pack of children and scrambled up a cargo net onto a platform. He raced across thebridge—jumped onto the next platform, just in time. The bridge flipped and sent five others into thewater below. He paused at the rope tied to the large basket. It ran up through a pulley and then back down. He didn’tthink he was strong enough to pull himself up in it. Instead, he tackled a knotted climbing rope andscrunched his body up. The rope swung wildly around the center pole. John looked down and almost losthis grip. It looked twice as far down as it had looked from the ground. He saw all the others, someclimbing, others floundering in the water, getting up and starting over. No one was as close to the bell ashe was. He swallowed his fear and kept climbing up. He thought of the ice cream and chocolate brownies andhow he was going to win. John got to the top, grabbed the bell, and rang it three times. He then clasped the steel pole and slid allthe way to the ground, falling into a pile of cushions. He got up and ran smiling all the way to the Chief Petty Officer. John crossed the finish line and gave avictory cry. “I was first,” he said, panting. Mendez nodded and made a check on his clipboard. John watched as the others made it and up rang the bell then raced across the finish line. Kelly and Samhad trouble. They got stuck in a line to get to the bell as everyone bunched up at the end. They finally rang the bell, slid down together . . . but they crossed the finish line last. They glared atJohn. He shrugged. “Good work, Trainees,” Mendez said, and he beamed at them all. “Let’s get back to the barracks andchow down.” The children, covered in mud and leaning on each another, cheered. “—all except team three,” Mendez said, and looked at Sam, Kelly, and then John. “But I won,” John protested. “I was first.” “Yes,you were first,” Mendez explained, “but your team came in last.” He then addressed all thechildren. “Remember this:you don’t win unless your team wins. One person winning at the expense ofthe group means that you lose.” John ran in a stupor all the way back to the barracks. It wasn’t fair. He had won. How can you win andstill lose? He watched as the others stuffed themselves with turkey, white meat dripping with gravy. They spooneddown mountains of vanilla ice cream and left the mess hall with chocolate encrusting the corners of theirmouths. John got a liter of water. He drank it, but it didn’t have any taste. It did nothing to fill his hunger. He wanted to cry, but he was too tired. He collapsed in his bunk, thinking of ways to get even with Samand Kelly for messing him up—but he couldn’t think. Every muscle and bone ached. John fell asleep as soon as his head hit the flat pillow. The next day was the same—calisthenics and running all morning, then class until the afternoon. Today Déjà taught them about wolves. The classroom became a holographic meadow, and the childrenwatched seven wolves hunt a moose. The pack worked together, striking wherever the giant beast wasn’tfacing. It was fascinating and horrifying to watch the wolves track down, and then devour, an animalmany times their size. John avoided Sam and Kelly in the classroom. He stole a few extra crackers when no one was lookingbut they didn’t dull his hunger. After class, they ran back to the playground. Today it was different. There were fewer bridges and morecomplicated rope-and-pulley systems. The pole with the bell was now twenty meters taller than any ofthe others. “Same teams as yesterday,” Mendez announced. Sam and Kelly walked up to John. Sam shoved him. John’s temper flared—he wanted to hit Sam in the face, but he was too tired. He’d need all his strengthto get to the bell. “You better help us,” Sam hissed, “or I’ll push you off one of those platforms.” “And I’ll jump on top of you,” Kelly added. “Okay,” John whispered. “Just try not to slow me down.” John examined the course. It was like doing a maze on paper, only this one twisted and turned into andout of the page. Many bridges and rope ladders led to dead ends. He squinted—then found one possibleroute. He nudged Sam and Kelly then pointed. “Look,” he said, “that basket and rope on the far side. It goesstraight to the top. It’s a long pull, though.” He flexed his biceps, uncertain if he could make it in hisweakened state. “We can do it,” Sam said. John glanced at the other teams; they were searching the course as well. “We’ll have to make a quickrun for it,” he said. “Make sure no one else gets there first.” “I’m fast,” Kelly said. “Real fast.” “Trainees, get ready,” Mendez shouted. “Okay,” John said. “You sprint ahead and hold it for us.” “Go!” Kelly shot forward. John had never seen anyone move like her. She ran like the wolves he had seentoday; her feet seemed barely to touch the ground. She got to the basket. John and Sam were only halfway there. One boy beat them to the basket. “Get out,” he ordered Kelly. “I’m going up.” Sam and John ran up and pushed him back. “Wait your turn,” Sam said. John and Sam joined Kelly in the basket. Together they pulled on the rope and raised themselves up. There was a lot of rope—for every three meters they pulled, they only rose one meter. A breeze madethe basket sway and bounce into the pole. “Faster,” John urged. They pulled as one person, six hands working in unison, and accelerated into the sky. They didn’t get there first. They were third. Each of them got to ring the bell, though—Kelly, Sam, andJohn. They slid down the pole. Kelly and Sam waited for John to land, and then together they ran across thefinish line. Chief Petty Officer Mendez watched them. He didn’t say anything, but John thought he saw a smileflicker across his face. Sam clapped John and Kelly on their backs. “That was good work,” Sam said. He looked thoughtful fora moment, then said, “We can be friends . . . I mean, if you want. It’d be no big deal.” Kelly shrugged and replied, “Sure.” “Okay,” John said. “Friends.” Chapter 5 0630 Hours, July 12, 2519 (Military Calendar) /Epsilon Eridani System, Reach Military Wilderness Training Preserve, planet ReachJohn held on tight as the dropship accelerated up and over a jagged snowcapped mountain range. Thesun peeked over the horizon and washed the white snow with pinks and oranges. The other members ofhis unit pressed their faces to the windows and watched. Sam sat next to him and looked outside. “Nice place for a snowball fight.” “You’ll lose,” Kelly said. She leaned over John’s shoulder to get a better look at the terrain. “I’m a deadaim with snowballs.” She scratched the stubble of her shorn hair. “Dead is right,” John muttered. “Especially when you load them with rocks.” CPO Mendez stepped from the cockpit into the passenger compartment. The trainees stood and snappedto attention. “At ease, and sit down.” The silver at Mendez’s temples had grown to a band across theside of his closely shaved hair, but if anything he had gotten stronger and tougher since John had firstlaid eyes on him two years ago. “Today’s mission will be simple for a change.” Mendez’s voice easily penetrated the roar of thedropship’s engines. He handed a stack of papers to Kelly. “Pass these out, Recruit.” “Sir!” She saluted smartly and handed one paper to each of the seventy-five children in the squad. “These are portions of maps of the local region. You will be set down by yourselves. You will thennavigate to a marked extraction point and we will pick you up there.” John turned his map over. It was just one part of a much larger map—no drop or extraction pointmarked. How was he supposed to navigate without a reference point? But he knew this was part of themission, to answer that question on his own. “One more thing,” Mendez said. “The last trainee to make it to the extraction point will be left behind.” He glanced out a window. “And it’s a very long walk back.” John didn’t like it. He wasn’t going to lose, but he didn’t want anyone else to lose, either. The thought ofKelly or Sam or any of the others marching all the way back made him uneasy . . . if theycould make itall the way back alone over those mountains. “First drop in three minutes,” Mendez barked. “Trainee 117, you’re up first.” “Sir! Yes, sir!” John replied. He glanced out the window and scanned the terrain. There was a ring of jagged mountains, a valley thickwith cedars, and a ribbon of silver—a river that fed into a lake. John nudged Sam, pointed to the river, then jerked his thumb toward the lake. Sam nodded, then pulled Kelly aside and pointed out the window. Kelly and Sam moved quickly downthe line of seated trainees. The ship decelerated. John felt his stomach rise as they dropped toward the ground. “Trainee 117: front and center.” Mendez stepped to the rear of the compartment as the ship’s tail splitand a ramp extended. Cold air blasted into the ship. He patted John on the shoulder. “Watch out forwolves in the forest, 117.” “Yes, sir!” John looked over his shoulder at the others. His teammates gave him an almost imperceptible nod. Good, everyone got his message. He ran down the ramp and into the forest. The dropship’s engines roared to life and it rose high into thecloudless sky. He zipped up his jacket. He wore only fatigues, boots, and a heavy parka—not exactly thegear he’d pack for a prolonged stay in the wilderness. John started toward one particularly sharp peak he had spotted from the air; the river lay in thatdirection. He’d follow it downstream and meet the others at the lake. He marched through the woods until he heard the gurgling of a stream. He got close enough to see thedirection of the flow, then headed back into the forest. Mendez’s exercises often had a twist to them—stun mines on the obstacle course, snipers with paint pellet guns during parade drills. And with the Chiefup in that dropship, John wasn’t about to reveal his position unless he had a good reason. He passed a blueberry bush and took the time to strip it before he moved on. This was the first time in months he had been alone and could just think. He popped a handful of berriesinto his mouth and chewed. He thought about the place that had been his home, his parents . . . but more and more that seemed like adream. John knew it wasn’t, and that he had once had a different life. But this was the life he wanted. Hewas a soldier. He had an important job to train for. Mendez said they were the Navy’s best and brightest. That they were the only hope for peace. He liked that. Before, he never knew what he would be when he grew up. He never really thought about anything otherthan watching vids and playing—nothing had been a challenge. Now every day was a challenge and a new adventure. John knew more things, thanks to Déjà, than he ever thought he could have learned at his old school: algebra and trigonometry, the history of a hundred battles and kings. He could string a trip line, fire arifle, and treat a chest wound. Mendez had shown him how to be strong . . . not only with his body, butstrong with his head, too. He had a family here: Kelly, Sam, and all the others in his squad. The thought of his squadmates brought him back to Mendez’s mission—one of them was going to beleft behind. There had to be a way to get them all home. John decided he wasn’t going to leave if hecouldn’t figure it out. He arrived at the edge of the lake; stood and listened. John heard an owl hooting in the distance. He marched toward the sound. “Hey, owl,” he said when hewas close. Sam stepped out from behind a tree and grinned. “That’s ‘Chief Owl’ to you, Trainee.” They walked around the circumference of the lake, gathering the rest of the children in the squad. Johncounted them to make sure: sixty-seven. “Let’s get the map pieces together,” Kelly suggested. “Good idea,” John said. “Sam, take three and scout the area. I don’t want any of the Chief’s surprisessneaking up on us.” “Right.” Sam picked Fhajad, James, and Linda and then the four of them took off into the brush. Kelly collected the map pieces and settled in the shade of an ancient cedar tree. “Some of these don’tbelong, and some are copies,” she said, and she laid them out. “Yes, here’s an edge. Got it—this is thelake, the river, and here . . . ” She pointed to a distant patch of green. “That’s got to be the extractionpoint.” She shook her head and frowned. “If the legend on this map is right, it’s a full day’s hike,though. We better get started.” John whistled and a moment later Sam and his scouts returned. “Let’s move out,” John said. No one argued. They fell into line behind Kelly as she navigated. Sam blazed the trail ahead. He had thebest eyes and ears. Several times he stopped and signaled everyone to freeze or hide—but it turned outto be just a rabbit or a bird. After several miles of marching, Sam dropped back. He whispered to John, “This is too easy. It’s notlike any of the Chief’s normal field exercises.” John nodded. “I’ve been thinking that, too. Just keep your eyes and ears sharp.” They stopped at noon to stretch and eat berries they had gathered along the trail. Fhajad spoke up. “I want to know one thing,” he said. He paused to wipe the sweat off his dark skin. “We’re going to get to the extraction point at the same time. So who’s getting left behind? We shoulddecide now.” “Draw straws,” someone suggested. “No,” John said, and stood. “No one’s being left behind. We’re going to figure a way to getall of us out.” “How?” Kelly asked, scratching her head. “Mendez said—” “I know what he said. But there’s got to be a way—I just haven’t thought of one yet. Even if it has to beme that stays behind—I’ll make sure everyone gets back to the base.” John started marching again. “Come on, we’re wasting time.” The others fell in behind him. The shadows of the trees lengthened and melted together and the sun turned the edge of the sky red. Kelly halted and motioned for everyone else to stop. “We’re almost there,” she whispered. “Me and Sam will scout it out,” John said. “Everyone fall out . . . and keep quiet.” The rest of the children silently followed his orders. John and Sam crept through the underbrush and then hunkered down at the edge of a meadow. The dropship sat in the center of the grassy field; her floodlights illuminated everything for thirty meters. Six men sat on the open launch ramp, smoking cigarettes and passing a canteen between themselves. Sam motioned to drop back. “You recognize them?” he whispered. “No. You?” Sam shook his head. “They’re not in uniform. They don’t look like any soldiers I’ve ever seen. Maybethey’re rebels. Maybe they stole the dropship and killed the Chief.” “No way,” John said. “Nothing can kill the Chief. But one thing’s for sure: I don’t think we can justwalk up there and get a free ride back to the base. Let’s go back.” They crept back into the woods and then explained the situation to the others. “What do you want to do?” Kelly asked him. John wondered why she thought he had an answer. He looked around and saw everyone was watchinghim, waiting for him to speak. He shifted on his feet. He had to say something. “Okay . . . we don’t know who these men are or what they’ll do when they see us. So we find out.” The children nodded, seeming to think this was the right thing to do. “Here’s how,” John told them. “First, I’ll need a rabbit.” “That’s me,” Kelly said, and sprang to her feet. “I’m the fastest.” “Good,” John said. “You go to the edge of the meadow—and then let them see you. I’ll go along andhide nearby and watch. In case anything happens to you, I’ll report back to the others.” She nodded. “Then you lure a few back here. Run right past this spot. Sam, you’ll be out in the open, pretending likeyou’ve broken your leg.” “Gotcha,” Sam said. He walked over to Fhajad and had him scrape his shin with his boot. Blood welledfrom the wound. “The rest of you,” John said, “wait in the woods in a big circle. If they try to do anything but helpSam . . . ” John made a fist with his right hand and slammed it into his open palm. “Remember themoose and the wolves?” They all nodded and grinned. They had seen that lesson many times in Déjà’s classroom. “Get some rocks,” John told them. Kelly stripped off her parka, stretched her legs and knees. “Okay,” she said, “let’s do this.” Sam lay down, clutching his leg. “Oooh—it hurts, help me.” “Don’t overdo it,” John said, and kicked some dirt on him. “Or they’ll know it’s a setup.” John and Kelly then crept toward the meadow and halted a few meters form the edge. He whispered toher, “If you want me to be the rabbit . . . ” She slugged him in the shoulder—hard. “You think I can’t do my part?” “I take it back,” he said, rubbing his shoulder. John moved off ten meters to her flank, took cover, and watched. Kelly emerged at the edge of the meadow, stepping into the illumination from the dropship’s floodlights. “Hey!” she said, and waved her arms over her head. “Over here. You got any food? I’m starving.” The men slowly stood and pulled out stun batons. “There’s one,” John heard them whisper. “I’ll get her. The rest of you stay here and wait for the others.” The man cautiously approached Kelly, a stun baton held behind his back so she couldn’t see it. Shestayed put and waited for him to get closer. “Hang on a sec,” she said. “I dropped my jacket back there. I’ll be right back.” She turned and ran. Theman leaped after her, but she had already vanished into the shadows. “Stop!” “This will be too easy,” one of other men said. “Kids won’t know what hit them.” Another remarked,“Fish in a barrel.” John had heard enough. He ran after Kelly, but realized that neither he nor the other man had a chance tocatch her. He halted when he got close to where Sam lay. The man stopped. He looked around, his eyes not quite adjusted to the dark, then spotted Sam on theground holding his bloody leg. “Please, help me,” Sam whimpered. “It’s broken.” “I got your broken leg right here, kid.” The man raised his baton. John picked up a rock. He threw it, but missed. The man spun around. “Who’s there?” Sam rolled to his feet and darted away. There was a rustling in the forest, then a hail of stones whistledthrough the trees, pelting the man. Kelly appeared and sidearmed a rock as hard as she could—and hit the man dead center in the forehead. He toppled and slammed into the ground. The other children moved in. “What do we do with him?” Sam asked. “It’s just an exercise, right?” Fhajad said. “He has to be with Mendez.” John rolled the man over. A trickle of blood snaked from his head into his eye socket. “You heard him,” John whispered. “You saw what he was going to do to Sam. Mendez or our trainerswould never do that to us. Ever. He’s got no uniform. No insignias. He’s not one of us.” John kicked the man in the face and then the ribs. The man reflexively curled into a ball. “Get his baton.” Sam grabbed the weapon. He kicked him, too. “Now we go back and get the others,” John told them. “Kelly, you be the rabbit again. Just get them tothe edge of the clearing. Duck out, and let us do the rest.” She nodded and started back to the meadow. The rest of the squad fanned out, collecting rocks along theway. After a minute Kelly stepped onto the grassy field and shouted, “That guy fell and hit his head. Overhere!” The five remaining men stood and ran toward her. When they were close enough, John whistled. The air suddenly swarmed with stones. The men held up their hands and tried to protect themselves. They dropped and covered their heads. John whistled again and sixty-seven children charged screaming toward the bewildered men. The mengot up to defend themselves. They looked stunned—like they couldn’t believe what they were seeing. Sam smashed his baton over a man’s head. Fhajad was hit squarely in the face by one man’s fist, and hefell. The men were overwhelmed by a wave of flesh, beaten to the ground with fists and stones and bootsuntil they no longer moved. John stood over their bleeding bodies. He was mad. They would have hurt him and his squad. He wantedto kick in their skulls. He took a deep breath and then exhaled. He had better things to do and biggerproblems to figure out—anger would have to wait. “Want to call Mendez now?” Sam asked as he pulled Fhajad shakily to his feet. “Not yet,” John told him. He marched onto the dropship. No one else was on board. John accessed the COM system and opened the mail link. He linked up with Déjà. Her face appeared, ascratchy hologram hovering over the terminal. “Good evening, Trainee 117,” she said. “Do you have a homework question?” “Kind of,” he replied. “One of CPO Mendez’s assignments.” “Ah.” After moment’s pause she said, “Very well.” “I’m in a Pelican dropship. There’s no pilot, but I need to get home. Teach me to fly it, please.” Déjà shook her head. “You are not rated to fly that craft, Trainee. But Ican help. Do you see the wingedicon in the corner of your screen? Tap it three times.” John tapped it and a hundred icons and displays filled the screen. “Touch the green arrows at nine o’clock twice,” she told him. He did and then the wordsautopilot activated flashed onscreen. “I have control now,” Déjà said. “I will get you home.” “Hang on a second,” John said and ran outside. “Everyone onboard—double time!” The children ran onto the ship. Kelley paused and asked, “Who’s getting left behind?” “No one,” John said. “Just get in.” He made sure he was the last on the ship, then said, “Okay, Déjà, getout us out of here.” The dropship’s jets roared to life and it rose into the sky. * * *John stood at attention in Chief Petty Officer Mendez’s office. He had never been in here. No one had. A trickle of sweat dripped down his back. The dark wood paneling and the smell of cigar smoke madehim feel claustrophobic. Mendez glowered at John as he read the report on his clipboard. The door opened and Dr. Halsey walked in. Mendez stood, gave her a curt nod and then sat back in hispadded chair. “Hello, John,” Dr. Halsey said. She sat across from Mendez, crossed her legs, and then adjusted her grayskirt. “Dr. Halsey,” John replied instantly. He saluted. None of the other grown-ups called him by his firstname, ever. He didn’t understand why she did. “Trainee 117,” Mendez snapped. “Tell me again why you stole UNSC property . . . and why youattacked the men I had assigned to guard it.” John wanted to explain that he was just doing what had to be done. That he was sorry. That he would doanything to make it up. But John knew the Chief hated whiners, almost as much as he hated excuses. “Sir,” John said. “The guards were out of uniform. No insignia. They failed to identify themselves, sir!” “Hmm,” Mendez mused over the report again. “So it seems. And the ship?” “I took my squad home, sir. I was the last onboard—so if anyone should have been left—” “I didn’t ask for a passenger list, Crewman.” His voice softened to a growl and he turned to Dr. Halsey. “What are we going to do with this one?” “Do?” She pushed her glasses higher on her nose and examined John. “I think that’s obvious, Chief. Make him a Squad Leader.” Chapter 6 1130 Hours March 09, 2525 (Military Calendar) /Epsilon Eridani System, Office of Naval Intelligence Medical Facility, in orbit around planet Reach“I want that transmission decoded now,” Dr. Halsey snapped at Déjà. “The encryption scheme is extremely complex,” replied Déjà with a hint of irritation in her normallyglass-smooth voice. “I don’t even know why they bothered. Who else but Beta-5 Division even has theresources to use this data?” “Spare me the banter, Déjà. I’m not in the mood. Just concentrate on the decryption.” “Yes, Doctor.” Dr. Halsey paced across the antiseptic white tile of the Observation Room. One side of the room wasfilled with floor-to-ceiling terminals that monitored the vital signs of the children—test subjects, shecorrected herself. They displayed drug uptake rates and winking green, blue, and red status indicators: EKGs, pulse rates, and a hundred other pieces of medical data. The other side of the observation room overlooked dozens of translucent domes, windows into thesurgical bays on the level below. Each bay was a sealed environment, staffed with the best surgeons andbiotechnicians that the Office of Naval Intelligence could drum up. The bays had been scrubbed andirradiated and were in the final preparation stages to receive and hold the special biohazardous materials. “Done,” Déjà announced. “The file awaits your inspection, Doctor.” Dr. Halsey stopped her pacing and sat. “On my glasses, please, Déjà.” Her glasses scanned retinal and brain patterns, and the security barrier of the file lifted. With a blink ofher eyes, she opened the file. It read: United Nations Space Command Priority Transmission 09872H-98Encryption Code:RedPublic Key:file /excised access Omega/From:Admiral Ysionris Jeromi, Chief Medical Officer, UNSC Research Station HopefulTo:Dr. Catherine Elizabeth Halsey M.D., Ph.D., special civilian consultant (civilian IdentificationNumber: 10141-026-SRB4695)Subject:Mitigating factors and relative biological risks associated with queried experimental medicalprocedures. Classification:RESTRICTED (BGX Directive)/start file/Catherine,I am afraid further analysis has yielded no viable alternatives to mitigate the risks in your proposed“hypothetical” experimentation. I have, however, attached the synopsis of my team’s findings as well asall relevant case studies. Perhaps you will find them useful. I hope it is a hypothetical study . . . the use of Binobo chimpanzees in your proposal is troublesome. These animals are expensive and rare now since they are no longer bred in captivity. I would hate to seesuch valuable specimens wasted in some Section Three project. Best,y.j. She winced at the veiled rebuke in the Admiral’s communiqué. He had never approved of her decisionto work with the Office of Naval Intelligence, and made his disappointment with his star pupil evidentevery time she visitedHopeful. It was hard enough to justify the morality of the course she was about to embark upon. Jeromi’sdisapproval only made her decision more difficult. Dr. Halsey gritted her teeth and returned to the report. Synopsis of chemical/ biological risksWARNING: the following procedures are classified level-3 experimental. Primate test subjectsmust be cleared through UNSC Quartermaster General Office code: OBF34. Follow gamma codebiohazard disposal protocol. 1. Carbide ceramic ossification:advanced material grafting onto skeletal structures to make bonesvirtually unbreakable. Recommended coverage not to exceed 3 percent total bone mass because ofsignificant white blood cell necrosis. Specific risk for pre- and near-postpubescent adolescents: skeletalgrowth spurts may cause irreparable bone pulverization. See attached case studies. 2.Muscular enhancement injections: protein complex is injected intramuscularly to increase tissuedensity and decrease lactase recovery time. Risk: 5 percent of test subjects experience a fatal cardiacvolume increase. 3. Catalytic thyroid implant:platinum pellet containing human growth hormone catalyst is implanted inthe thyroid to boost growth of skeletal and muscle tissues. Risk: rare instances of elephantiasis. Suppressed sexual drive. 4. Occipital capillary reversal:submergence and boosted blood vessel flow beneath the rods and conesof subject’s retina. Produces a marked visual perception increase. Risk: retinal rejection and detachment. Permanent blindness. See attached autopsy reports. 5. Superconducting fibrification of neural dendrites:alteration of bioelectrical nerve transduction toshielded electronic transduction. Three hundred percent increase in subject reflexes. Anecdotal evidenceof marked increase in intelligence, memory, and creativity. Risk: significant instances of Parkinson’sdisease and Fletcher’s syndrome. /end file/PressENTER to open linked attachments. Dr. Halsey closed the file. She erased all traces of it—sent Déjà to track the file pathways all the wayback toHopeful and destroy Admiral Jeromi’s notes and files relative to this incident. She removed her glasses and pinched the bridge of her nose. “I’m sorry,” Déjà said. “I, too, had hoped there would be some new process to lower the risks.” Dr. Halsey sighed. “I have doubts, Déjà. I thought the reasons so compelling when we first startedproject SPARTAN. Now? I . . . I just don’t know.” “I have been over the ONI projections of Outer Colony stability three times, Doctor. Their conclusion iscorrect: massive rebellion within twenty years unless drastic military action is taken. And you know the‘drastic military action’ the brass would like. The SPARTANS are our only option to avoidoverwhelming civilian losses. They will be the perfect pinpoint strike force. They can prevent a civilwar.” “Only if they survive to fulfill that mission,” Dr. Halsey countered. “We should delay the procedures. More research needs to be done. We could use the time to work on MJOLNIR. We need time to—” “There is another reason to proceed expeditiously,” Déjà said. “Although I am loath to bring this to yourattention, I must. If the Office of Naval Intelligence detects a delay in their prize project, you will likelybe replaced by someone who harbors . . . fewer doubts. And regrettably for the children, most likelysomeone less qualified.” “I hate this.” Dr. Halsey got up and strode to the fire exit. “And sometimes, Déjà, I hate you, too.” Sheleft the observation room. Mendez was waiting for her in the hallway. “Walk with me, Chief,” she said. He followed without a word as they took the stairs to the pre-op wing of the hospital. They entered room 117. John lay in bed and an IV drip was attached to his arm. His head had beenshaved and incision vectors had been lasered onto his entire body. Despite these indignities, Dr. Halseymarveled at what a spectacular physical specimen he had grown into. Fourteen years old and he had thebody of an eighteen-year-old Olympic athlete, and a mind the equal of any Naval Academy honorsgraduate. Dr. Halsey forced the best smile she could muster. “How are you feeling?” “I’m fine, ma’am,” John replied groggily. “The nurse said the sedation would take effect soon. I’mfighting it to see how long I can stay awake.” His eyelids fluttered. “It’s not easy.” John spotted Mendez and he struggled to sit up and salute, but failed. “I know this is one of the Chief’sexercises. But I don’t know what the twist is. Can you tell me, Dr. Halsey? Just this time? How do Iwin?” Mendez looked away. Dr. Halsey leaned closer to John as he closed his eyes and started to breathe deeply. “I’ll tell you how to win, John,” she whispered. “You have to survive.” Chapter 7 0000 Hours March 30, 2525 (Military Calendar) /UNSC CarrierAtlas en route to the LambdaSerpentis system“And so we commit the bodies of our fallen brothers to space.” Mendez solemnly closed his eyes for a moment, the ceremony completed. He pressed a control and theash canisters moved slowly into the ejection tubes . . . and the void beyond. John stood rigidly at attention. The carrier’s missile launch bays—normally cramped, overcrowded, andbustling with activity—were unusually quiet. TheAtlas ’s firing deck had been cleared of munitions andcrew. Long, unadorned black banners now hung from the bay’s overhead gantries. “Honors . . .ten hut !” Mendez barked. John and the other surviving Spartans saluted in unison. “Duty,” Mendez said. “Honor and self sacrifice. Death does not diminish these qualities in a soldier. Weshall remember.” A series of thumps resounded through theAtlas ’s hull as the canisters were hurled into space. The view screen flickered and displayed a field of stars. The canisters appeared one by one, quicklyfalling behind the carrier as it continued on its course. John watched. With each of the stainless-steel cylinders that drifted by, he felt that he was losing a partof himself. It felt like leaving his people behind. Mendez’s face might as well been chiseled from stone, for all the emotion it showed. He finished hisprotracted salute and then said, “Crewmen, dismissed.” Not everything had been lost. John glanced around the launch chamber; Sam, Kelly, and thirty othersstill stood at attention in their black dress uniforms. They had made it unharmed through the last—mission wasn’t quite the right word. More or less. There were a dozen others, though, who had lived . . . but were no longer soldiers. It hurt John to look atthem. Fhajad sat in a wheelchair, shaking uncontrollably. Kirk and René were in neutral-buoyancy geltanks, breathing through respirators; their bones had been so twisted they no longer looked human. There were others, still alive, but with injuries so critical they could not be moved. Orderlies pushed Fhajad and the other injured toward the elevator. John strode toward them and stopped, blocking their path. “Stand fast, Crewman,” he demanded. “Where are you taking my men?” The orderly halted and his eyes widened. He swallowed and then said, “I, sir . . . I have my orders, sir.” “Squad Leader,” Mendez called out. “A moment.” “Stay,” John told the orderly, and marched to face Chief Mendez. “Yes, sir.” “Let them go,” Mendez said quietly. “They can’t fight anymore. They don’t belong here.” John inadvertently glanced at the view screen and the long line of canisters as they shrank in thedistance. “What will happen to my men?” “The Navy takes care of its own,” Mendez replied, and lifted his chin a little higher. “They may nolonger be the fastest or the strongest soldiers—but they still have sharp minds. They can still planmissions, analyze data, troubleshoot ops . . .” John exhaled a sigh of relief. “That’s all any of us ask for, sir: a chance to serve.” He turned to faceFhajad and the others. He snapped to attention and saluted. Fhajad managed to raise one shaking armand return the salute. The orderlies wheeled them away. John looked at what remained of his squad. None of them had moved since the memorial ceremony. They were waiting for their next mission. “Our orders, sir?” John asked. “Two days full bed rest, Squad Leader. Then microgravity physical therapy aboard theAtlas until yourecover from the side effects of your augmentation.” Side effects.John flexed his hand. He was clumsy now. Sometimes he could barely walk without falling. Dr. Halsey had assured him that these “side effects” were a good sign. “Your brain must relearn how tomove your body with faster reflexes and stronger muscles,” she told him. But his eyes hurt, and theybled a little in the morning, too. He had constant headaches. Every bone in his body ached. John didn’t understand any of this. He only knew that he had a duty to perform—and now he feared hewouldn’t be able to. “Is that all, sir?” he asked Mendez. “No,” the Chief replied. “Déjà will be running your squad through the dropship pilot simulator as soonas they are up to it. And,” he added, “if they are up for the challenge, she wanted to cover some moreorganic chemistry and complex algebra.” “Yes, sir,” John replied, “we’re up to the challenge.” “Good.” John continued to stand fast. “Was there something else, Squad Leader?” John furrowed his brow, hesitated, and then finally said, “I was Squad Leader. The last mission wastherefore my responsibility . . . and members of my squaddied . What did I do wrong?” Mendez stared at John with his impenetrable black eyes. He glanced at the squad, then back to John. “Walk with me.” He led John to the view screen. He stood and watched as the last of the canistersvanished into the darkness. “A leader must be ready to send the soldiers under his command to their deaths,” Mendez said withoutturning to face John. “You do this because your duty to the UNSC supersedes your duty to yourself oreven your crew.” John looked away from the view screen. He couldn’t look at the emptiness anymore. He didn’t want tothink of his teammates—friends who were like brothers and sisters to him—forever lost. “It is acceptable,” Mendez said, “to spend their lives if necessary.” He finally turned and meet John’sgaze. “It is not acceptable, however, to waste those lives. Do you understand the difference?” “I . . . believe I understand, sir,” John said. “But which was it on this last mission? Lives spent? Or liveswasted?” Mendez turned back toward the blackness of space and didn’t answer. 0430 Hours, April 22, 2525 (Military Calendar) /UNSC CarrierAtlas on patrol in the LambdaSerpentis SystemJohn oriented himself as he entered the gym. From the stationary corridor, it was easy to see that this section of theAtlas rotated. The constantacceleration gave the circular walls a semblance of gravity. Unlike the other portions of the carrier, however, this section wasn’t cylindrical, but rather a segmentedcone. The outer portion was wider and rotated more slowly than the narrower inner portion—simulatinggravitational forces from one quarter to two gravities along the length of the gym. There were free weights, punching and speed bags, a boxing ring, and machines to stretch and toneevery muscle group. No one else was up this early. He had the place to himself. John started with arm curls. He went to the center section, calibrated at one gee, and picked up a twentykilogramdumbbell. It felt wrong—too light. The spin must be off. He set the weights down and pickedup a forty-kilogram set. That felt right. For the last three weeks the Spartans had gone through a daily routine of stretching, isometric exercises,light sparring drills, and lots of eating. They were under orders to consume five high-protein meals aday. After every meal they had to report to the ship’s medical bay for a series of mineral and vitamininjections. John was looking forward to getting back to Reach and his normal routine. There were only thirty-two soldiers left in his squad. Thirty candidates had “washed out” of the Spartanprogram; they died during the augmentation process. The other dozen, suffering from side effects of theprocess, had been permanently reassigned within the Office of Naval Intelligence. He missed them all, but he and the others had to go on—they had to recover and prove themselves allover again. John wished Chief Mendez had warned him. He could have prepared. Maybe that was the trick to thelast mission—to learn to be prepared for anything. He wouldn’t let his guard down again. He took a seat at the leg machine, set it to the maximum weight—but it felt too light. He moved to thehigh-gee end of the gym. Things felt normal again. John worked every machine, then moved to a speed bag, a leather ball attached to the floor and ceilingby a thick elastic band. There were only certain allowed frequencies at which the bag could be hit, or itgyrated chaotically. His fist jabbed forward, cobra-quick, and struck. The speed bag moved, but slowly, like it wasunderwater . . . far too slowly considering how hard he had hit it. The tension on the line must be turnedway down. He twanged the line and it hummed. It was tight. Was everything broken in this room? He pulled a pin from the locking collar on the bench press. John walked to the center section—supposedly one gee. He held the pin a meter off the deck and dropped it. It clattered on the deck. It looked as if it had fallen normally . . . but somehow it also looked slow to John. He set the timer on his watch and dropped the pin again. Forty-five-hundredths of a second. One meter in about a half second. He forgot the formula for distance and acceleration, so he ran throughthe calculus and rederived the equation. He even did the square root. He frowned. He had always struggled with math before. The answer was a gravitational acceleration of nine point eight meters per second squared. One standardgee. So the roomwas rotating correctly.He was out of calibration. His experiment was cut short. Four men entered the gym. They were out of uniform, wearing only shortsand boots. Their heads were cleanly shaven. They were all heavily muscled, lean, and fit. The largest ofthe four was taller than John. Scars covered one side of his face. John could tell they were Special Forces—Orbital drop Shock Troopers. The ODSTs had the traditionaltattoos burned onto their arms: drop JET JUMPERS and FEET FIRST INTO HELL. “Helljumpers”—the infamous 105th. John had overheard mess hall chatter about them. They had areputation for success . . . and for brutality, even against fellow soldiers. John gave them a polite nod. They just brushed past him and started on the high-gravity free weights. The largest ODST lifted the barof the bench press. He struggled and the bar wavered unsteadily. The iron plates on the right end slid offand fell to the deck. The opposite end of the bar tilted, and he dropped the weight, almost crushing hisspotter’s foot. Startled by the noise, John jumped up. “What the—” The big ODST stood and glared at the locking collar that had slipped off. “Someone tookthe pin.” He growled and turned to John. John picked up the pin. “The error was mine,” he said and stepped forward. “My apologies.” The four ODSTs moved as one toward John. The big guy with the scars stood a hand’s breadth awayfrom John’s nose. “Why don’t you take that pin and shove it, meat?” he said, grinning. “Or better yet,maybe I should make you eat it.” He nodded to his friends. John only knew three ways to react to people. If they were his superior officers, he obeyed them. If theywere part of his squad, he helped them. If they were a threat, he neutralized them. So when the men surrounding him moved . . . he hesitated. Not because he was afraid, but because these men could have fallen into any of John’s three categories. He didn’t know their rank. They were fellow servicemen in the UNSC. But, at the moment, they didn’tseem friendly. The two men flanking him grabbed John’s biceps. The one behind him tried to slip an arm around hisneck. John hunched his shoulders and tucked his chin to his chest so he couldn’t be choked. He whipped hisright elbow over the hand holding him, pinned it to his side, and then straight punched the man andbroke his nose. The other three reacted, tightening their grips and stepping closer—but like the dropped pin, they movedslowly. John ducked and slipped out of the unsuccessful headlock. He spun free, breaking the grasp of the manon his left at the same time. “Stand down!” A booming voice echoed across the gym. A sergeant stepped into the gym and strode toward them. Unlike Mendez, who was fit and trim and wasalways serious, this man’s stomach bulged over his belt, and he looked bemused. John snapped to attention. The others stood there and continued to glare at John. “Sarge,” the man with the bleeding nose said. “We were just—” “Did I ask you a question?” the Sergeant barked. “No, Sergeant!” the man replied. The Sergeant eyed John, then the ODSTs. “You’re all so eager to fight, get in the ring and go to it.” “Sir!” John said. He went to the boxing ring, slipped through the ropes, and stood there waiting. This was starting to make sense. It was a mission. John had received orders from a superior officer, andthe four men were now targets. The big ODST pushed through the ropes and the others gathered to watch. “I’m going to rip you topieces, meat,” he grunted through clenched teeth. John sprang off his back foot and launched his entire weight behind his first strike. His fist smashed intothe man’s wide chin. John’s left hand followed and impacted on the soldier’s jaw. The man’s hands came up; John stepped in, pinned one of the man’s arms to his chest, and followedthrough with a hook to his floating ribs. Bones broke. The man staggered back. John took a short step, brought his heel down on the man’s knee. Three morepunches and the man was against the ropes . . . then he stopped moving, his arm and leg and neck tiltedat unnatural angles. The three other men moved. The one with the bloody nose grabbed an iron bar. John didn’t need orders this time. Three attackers at once—he had to take them out before theysurrounded him. He might be faster, but he didn’t have eyes in the back of his head. The man with the iron bar swung a vicious blow at John’s ribs; John sidestepped, grabbed the man’shand, and clamped it to the bar. He twisted the bar and crushed the bones of his attacker’s wrist. John snapped a side kick toward the second man, caught him in the groin, crushing the soft organs andbreaking his target’s pelvis. John pulled the bar free—whipped around and caught the third man in the neck, hitting him so hard theODST was propelled over the ropes. “At ease, Number 117,” Chief Petty Officer Mendez barked. John obeyed and dropped the bar. Like the pin, it seemed to take too long for the impromptu weapon tohit the deck. The ODSTs lay crumpled on the ground, either unconscious or dead. Mendez, at the far end of the gym, strode toward the boxing ring. The Sergeant stood with his mouth open. “Chief Mendez, sir!” He snapped a crisp salute. “What are you—” He turned to John, his eyes widened, and he murmured, “He’s one ofthem , isn’t he?” “Medics are on their way,” Mendez said calmly. He stepped closer to the Sergeant. “There are two intelofficers waiting for you in Ops. They’ll debrief you . . .” He stepped back. “I suggest you report to themimmediately.” “Yes, sir,” the Sergeant said. He almost ran out of the gym. He looked once over his shoulder at John;then he moved even faster. “Your workout is over for today,” Mendez told John. John saluted and left the ring. A team of medics entered with stretchers and rushed toward the boxing ring. “Permission to speak, sir?” John said. Mendez nodded. “Were those men part of a mission? Were they targets or teammates?” John knew that thishad to be some sort of mission. The Chief had been too close for it to be acoincidence. “You engaged and neutralized a threat,” Mendez replied. “That action seems to have answered yourquestion, Squad Leader.” John wrinkled his forehead as he thought it through. “I followed the chain of command,” he said. “TheSergeant told me to fight. I was threatened and in imminent danger. But they were still UNSC SpecialForces. Fellow soldiers.” Mendez lowered his voice. “Not every mission has simple objectives or comes to a logical conclusion. Your priorities are to follow the orders in your chain of command, and then to preserve your life and thelives of your team. Is that clear?” “Sir,” John said. “Yes, sir.” He glanced back at the ring. Blood was seeping into the canvas mat. Johnhad an odd feeling in the pit of his stomach. He hit the showers and let the blood rinse off him. He felt strangely sorry for the men he had killed. But he knew his duty—the Chief had even been unusually verbose in order to clarify the matter. Followorders and keep himself and his team safe. That’s all he had to focus on. John didn’t give the incident inthe gym another thought. Chapter 8 0930 Hours, September 11, 2525 (Military Calendar) / Epsilon Eridani System, Reach UNSCMilitary Complex, planet ReachDr. Halsey reclined in Mendez’s padded chair. She considered pilfering one of the Sweet William cigarsfrom the box on his desk—see why he considered them such a treat. The stench wafting from the box,however, was too overwhelming. How did he stand them? The door opened and CPO Mendez halted in the doorway. “Ma’am,” he said, and stood straighter. “Iwasn’t informed that you would be visiting today. In fact, I had understood that you were out of thesystem for another week. I would have made arrangements.” “I’m sure you would have.” She folded her hands in her lap. “Our situation has changed. Where are mySpartans? They are not in their barracks, nor on any of the ranges.” Mendez hesitated. “They can no longer train here, ma’am. We had to find them . . . other facilities.” Dr. Halsey stood and smoothed the pleats in her gray skirt. “Maybe you should explain that statement,Chief.” “I could,” he replied, “but it will be easier to show you.” “Very well,” Dr. Halsey said, her curiosity piqued. Mendez escorted her to his personal Warthog parkedoutside his office. The all-terrain combat vehicle had been refitted; the heavy chain-gun on the back hadbeen removed and replaced with a rack of Argent V missiles. Mendez drove them off the base and onto winding mountain roads. “Reach was first colonized for itsrich titanium deposits,” Mendez told her. “There are mines in these mountains thousands of meters deep. The UNSC uses them for storage.” “I presume you do not have my Spartans taking inventory today, Chief?” “No, ma’am. We just need the privacy.” Mendez drove the Warthog past a manned guardhouse and into a large tunnel that sloped steeplyunderground. The road wound down in a spiral, deeper into sold granite. Mendez said, “Do you remember the Navy’sfirst experiments with powered exoskeletons?” “I’m not sure I see the connection between this place, my Spartans, and the exoskeleton projects,” Dr. Halsey replied, frowning, “but I’ll play along a bit further. Yes, I know all about the Mark I prototypes. We had to scrap the concept and redesign battle armor from the ground up for the MJOLNIR project. The Mark Is consumed enormous energy. Either they had to be plugged into a generator or useinefficient broadcast power—neither option is practical on a battlefield.” Mendez decelerated slightly as he approached a speed bump. The Warthog’s massive tires thudded overthe obstacle. “They used the units that weren’t scrapped,” Dr. Halsey continued, “as dock loaders to move heavyequipment.” She cocked one eyebrow. “Or might they have been dumped in a place like this?” “There are dozens of the suits here.” “You haven’t putmy Spartans in some of those antiques?” “No. Their trainers are using them for their own safety,” Mendez replied. “When the Spartans recoveredfrom microgravity therapy, they were eager to get back to their routine. However, we experienced some—” He paused, searching for the right word. “ . . . difficulties.” He glanced at his passenger. His face was grim. “Their first day back, three trainers were accidentallykilled during hand-to-hand combat exercises.” Dr. Halsey cocked an eyebrow. “Then they are faster and stronger than we anticipated?” “That,” Mendez replied, “would be understating the situation.” The tunnel opened into a large cavern. There were lights scattered on the walls, overhead a hundredmeters up on the ceiling, and along the floor, but they did little to dissipate the overwhelming darkness. Mendez parked the Warthog next to a small, prefabricated building. He jumped out and helped Dr. Halsey step from the vehicle. “This way, please.” Mendez gestured to the room. “We’ll have a betterview from inside.” The building had three glass walls and several monitors marked MOTION, INFRARED, DOPPLER,and PASSIVE. Mendez pushed a button and the room climbed a track along the wall until they weretwenty meters off the floor. Mendez keyed a microphone and spoke: “Lights.” Floodlights snapped on and illuminated a section of the cavern the size of a football field. In the centerstood a concrete bunker. Three men in the primitive Mark I power armor stood on top. Six more stoodevenly spaced around the perimeter. A red banner had been planted in the center of the bunker. “Capture the flag?” Dr. Halsey asked. “Past all that heavy armor?” “Yes. The trainers in those exoskeletons can run at thirty-two KPH, lift two tons, and have a thirtymillimeterminigun mounted on self-targeting armatures—stun rounds, of course. They’re also equippedwith the latest motion sensors and IR scopes. And needless to say, their armor is impervious to standardlight weapons. It would take two or three platoons of conventional Marines to take that bunker.” Mendez spoke again in the microphone, and his voice echoed off the cavern walls: “Start the drill.” Sixty seconds ticked by. Nothing happened. One hundred twenty seconds. “Where are the Spartans?” Dr. Halsey asked. “They’re here,” Mendez replied. Dr. Halsey caught a glimpse of motion in the dark: a shadow againstshadows, a familiar silhouette. “Kelly?” she whispered. The trainers turned and fired at the shadow, but it moved with almost supernatural quickness. Even theself-targeting systems couldn’t track it. From above, a man free-rappelled down from the girders and gantries overhead. The newcomer landedbehind one of the perimeter guards, quiet as a cat. He punched the guard’s armor twice, denting theheavy plates, then dropped low and swept the target’s legs out from under him. The guard sprawled onthe ground. The Spartan attached his rappelling line to the trainer. A moment later the writhing guard shot upward,into the darkness. Two other guards turned to attack. The Spartan dodged, rolled, and melted into the shadows. Dr. Halsey realized the trainer’s exoskeleton wasn’t being pulled up—it was being used as acounterweight. Two more Spartans, dangling from the other end of that rope, dropped unnoticed into the center of thebunker. Dr. Halsey immediately recognized one of them, although he was dressed entirely in black, savehis open eye slits—Number 117. John. John landed, braced, and kicked one guard. The man landed in a heap . . . eight meters away. The other Spartan jumped off the bunker; he flipped end over end, evading the stun rounds that filled theair. He threw himself at the farthest guard and they skidded together into the shadows. The guard’s gunstrobed once, and then it was dark again. On top of the bunker, John was a blur of slashing motions. A second guard’s exosuit erupted in afountain of hydraulic fluid and then collapsed under the armor’s weight. The last guard on the bunker turned to fire at John. Halsey gripped the edge of her chair. “He’s at pointblank range! Even stun rounds can kill at that distance!” As the guard’s gun fired, John sidestepped. The stun rounds slashed through the air, a clean miss. Johngrabbed the weapon’s armature—twisted—and with a screech of stressed metal, wrenched it free of theexoskeleton. He fired directly into the man’s chest and sent him tumbling off the bunker. The remaining quartet of perimeter guards turned and sprayed the area with suppression fire. A heartbeat later, the lights went out. Mendez cursed and keyed the mike. “Backups. Hit the backup lights now!” A dozen amber floods flickered to life. Not a Spartan was in sight, but the nine trainers were either unconscious or lay immobile in inert battlearmor. The red flag was gone. “Show me that again,” Dr. Halsey said unbelievingly. “You recorded all that, didn’t you?” “Of course.” Mendez tapped a button but the monitors played back—static. “Damn it. They got to thecameras, too,” he muttered, impressed. “Every time we find a new place to hide them, they disable therecording devices.” Dr. Halsey leaned against the glass wall staring at the carnage below. “Very well, Chief Mendez, whatelse do I need to know?” “Your Spartans can run at bursts of up to fifty-five KPH,” he explained. “Kelly can run a little faster, Ithink. They will only get quicker as they adjust to the ‘alterations’ we’ve made to their bodies. They canlift three times their body weight—which, I might add, is almost double the norm due to their increasedmuscle density. And they can virtually see in the dark.” Dr. Halsey pondered this new data. “They should not be performing so well. There must be unexplainedsynergistic effects brought on by the combined modifications. What are their reaction times?” “Almost impossible to chart. We estimate it at twenty milliseconds,” Mendez replied. He shook hishead, then added, “I believe it’s significantly faster in combat situations, when their adrenaline ispumping.” “Any physiological or mental instabilities?” “None. They work like no team I’ve ever seen before. Damn near telepathic, if you ask me. They weredropped in these caves yesterday, and I don’t know where they got black suits or the rope that for thatmaneuver, but I can guarantee they haven’t left this room. They improvise and improve and adapt. “And,” he added, “theylike it. The tougher the challenge, the harder the fight . . . the better their moralebecomes.” Dr. Halsey watched as the first trainer stirred and struggled to get out of his inert armor. “They might aswell have been killed,” she murmured. “But can the Spartans kill, Chief? Kill on purpose? Are theyready for real combat?” Mendez looked away and paused before he spoke. “Yes. If we ordered them to, they would kill quiteefficiently.” His body stiffened. “May I ask what ‘real combat’ you mean, ma’am?” She clasped her hands and wrung them nervously. “Something has happened, Chief. Something ONI andthe Admiralty never expected. The brass wants to deploy the Spartans. They want to test them in a realcombat mission.” “They’re as ready for that as I can make them,” Mendez said. He narrowed his dark eyes. “But this is farahead of your schedule. What happened? I’ve heard rumors there was some heavy action near Harvestcolony.” “Your rumors are out-of-date, Chief,” she said, and a chill crept into her voice. “There’s no morefighting at Harvest. Thereis no more Harvest.” Dr. Halsey punched the descent button, and the observation room slowly lowered to the floor. “Get them out of this hole,” she said crisply. “I want them ready to muster at 0400. We have a briefingat 0600 tomorrow aboard thePioneer . We’re taking them on a mission ONI has been saving for the rightcrew and the right time. This is it.” “Yes, ma’am,” Mendez replied. “Tomorrow we see if all the pain they’ve been through has been worth it.” Chapter 9 0605 Hours, September 12, 2525 (Military Calendar) / UNSC DestroyerPioneer , en route toEridanus System. John and the other Spartans stood at ease. The briefing room aboard the UNSC DestroyerPioneer made him uncomfortable. The holographicprojectors at the fore end of the triangular room showed the field of stars visible off the bow of the ship. John wasn’t used to seeing so much space; he kept expecting the room to decompress explosively. The stars flickered and faded and the overhead lights warmed. Chief Petty Officer Mendez and Dr. Halsey entered the room. The Spartans snapped to attention. “At ease,” Mendez said. He clasped his hands behind his back and clenched his jaw muscles. The Chieflooked almost . . . nervous. That made John nervous, too. Dr. Halsey walked to the podium. The overhead light reflected off her glasses. “Good morning,Spartans. I have good news for you. The word has come down. Command has decided to test yourunique abilities. You have a new mission: an insurgent base in the Eridanus System.” A star map appeared on the wall and zoomed in to show a warm orange sun ringed with twelve planets. “In 2513, an armed insurrection in this system was suppressed by the UNSC force—Operation: TREBUCHET.” An intersystem tactical map appeared, and tiny icons representing destroyers and carriers winked on. They engaged a force of a hundred smaller ships. Pinpoints of fire appeared against the dark. “The insurrection was put down,” Dr. Halsey continued. “However, elements of the rebel forces escapedand regrouped in the local asteroid belt.” The map tilted and moved into the circle of debris around the star. “Billions of rocks,” Dr. Halsey said, “where they hid from our forces . . . and continue to hide to thisday. For some time ONI believed that the rebels were disorganized, and were lacking in leadership. Thatappears to have changed. “We believe that one of these asteroids has been hollowed out, and that a formidable base has beenconstructed within. UNSC explorations into the belt have met either with no contact or with an ambushby superior forces.” She paused, pushed up her glasses, and added, “The Office of Naval Intelligence has also confirmed thatFLEETCOM has discovered a security breach within their organization—a rebel sympathizer leakinginformation to these forces.” John and the other Spartans shifted uneasily. A leak? It was possible. Déjà had shown them manyhistorical battles that had been won and lost because of traitors or informants. But it never occurred tohim that it could happen in the UNSC. A flat picture flashed over the star map: a middle-aged man with thinning hair, a neatly trimmed beard,and watery gray eyes. “This is their leader,” Dr. Halsey said. “Colonel Robert Watts. The original photo was taken afterOperation: TREBUCHET and has been computer aged. “Your mission is to infiltrate the rebel base, capture Watts, and return him—alive and unharmed—toUNSC-controlled space. This will deprive the rebels of their new leadership. And it will provide ONI achance to interrogate Watts and root out traitors within FLEETCOM.” Dr. Halsey stepped aside. “Chief Mendez?” Mendez exhaled and unclasped his hands. He strode to the podium and cleared his throat. “Thisoperation will be different from your previous missions. You will be engaging the enemy using liverounds and lethal force. They will be returning the favor. If there is any doubt, any confusion—andmake no mistake: in combat, there will be confusion—takeno chances. Kill first, ask questions later. “Support on this mission will be limited to the resources and firepower of this destroyer,” Mendezcontinued. “This is to minimize the chance of a leak in the command structure.” Mendez walked to the star map. The face of Colonel Watts snapped off and blueprints for a Parabolaclassfreighter appeared. “Although we don’t know the location of the rebel base, we believe they receive periodic shipmentsfrom Eridanus Two. The independent freighterLaden is due to leave space dock in six hours for a routinerecertification of her engines. She is being loaded with enough food and water to supply a small city. Additionally, her captain has been identified as a rebel officer thought to have been killed duringOperation: TREBUCHET. “You will slip aboard this freighter and hopefully hitch a ride to the rebel base. Once there, infiltrate theinstallation, grab Watts, and get off of that rock any way you can.” Chief Mendez gazed at them all. “Questions?” “Sir,” John said. “What are our extraction options?” “You have two options: a panic button that will relay a distress signal to a preestablished listening ship. Also, thePioneer will stay on-station . . . briefly. Our window here is thirteen hours.” He tapped the starmap on the edge of the asteroid belt and it glowed with a blue Nav marker. “I’ll leave the extractionchoice up to you. But let me point out that this asteroid belt has a circumference of more than a billionkilometers . . . making it impossible to canvass with ONI surveillance craft. If things get hot, you will beon your own. “Any other questions?” The Spartans sat, silent and immobile. “No? Well, listen up, Recruits,” Mendez added. “This time I’ve told you all the twists that I know of. Beprepared for anything.” His gaze fixed on John. “Squad Leader, you are hereby promoted to the rank ofPetty Officer Third Class.” “Sir!” John snapped to attention. “Assemble your team and equipment. Be ready to muster at 0300. We’ll drop you off at the EridanusTwo docks. You’re on your own from there.” “Yes, sir!” John said. Mendez saluted. He and Dr. Halsey then left the room. John turned to face his teammates. The other Spartans stood at attention. Thirty-three—too many for thisoperation. He needed a small team: five or six maximum. “Sam, Kelly, Linda, and Fred, meet me in the weapons locker in ten minutes.” The other Spartans sighedand their gazed dropped to the deck. “The rest of you fall out. You’ll have the more difficult part of thismission: You’ll have to wait here.” The weapons locker of thePioneer had been stocked with a bewildering array of combat equipment. Ona table were guns, knives, communication gear, body armor explosives, medical packs, survival gear,portable computers, even a thruster pack for maneuvering in space. More important than the equipment, however, John assessed his team. Sam had recovered from the augmentation faster than any of the other Spartans. He paced impatientlyaround the crates of grenades. He was the strongest of them all. He stood taller than John by a head. Hehad grown out his sandy hair to three centimeters. Chief Mendez had warned him that he was going tolook like a civilian soon. Kelly, in contrast, had taken the longest to recover. She stood in the corner with her arms crossed overher chest. John had thought she wasn’t going to make it. She was still gaunt and her hair had yet to growback. Her face, however, still had its rough, angular beauty. She scared John a little, too. She was fastbefore . . . now no one could touch her if she didn’t allow it. Fred sat cross-legged on the deck, twirling a razor-edged combat knife in glittering arcs. He alwayscame in second in all the contests. John thought he could have come in first, but he just didn’t like theattention. He was neither too short nor too tall. He wasn’t overly muscled or slim. His black hair wasshot with streaks of silver—a feature he hadn’t had before the augmentation. If anyone in the groupcould blend into a crowd, it would be him. Linda was the quietest member of the group. She was pale, had close-cropped red hair, and green eyes. She was a crack shot, an artist with a sniper rifle. Kelly circled the table once, and then selected a pair of grease-stained blue coveralls. Her name had beensloppily embroidered on the chest. “These our new trainee uniforms?” “ONI provided them,” John said. “They’re supposed to match what the crew of theLaden wears.” Kelly held the coveralls up and frowned. “They don’t give a girl much to work with.” “Try this on for size.” Linda held a black body suit up to Kelly’s long slender frame. They had used these black suits before. They were form-fitting, lightweight polymer body armor. Theycould deflect a small-caliber round and had refrigeration/heating units that would mask infraredsignatures. The integrated helmet had encryption and communications gear, a heads-up display, andthermal and motion detectors. Sealed tight, the unit had a fifteen-minute reserve of oxygen to let thewearer survive in vacuum. The suits were uncomfortable, and they were tricky to repair in the field. And they always neededrepairs. “They’re too tight,” Kelly said. “It’ll limit my range of motion.” “We wear them for this op,” John told her. “There are too many places between here and there withnothing to breathe but vacuum. As for the rest of your equipment, take what you want—but stay light. Without recon data on this place, we’re going to be moving fast . . . or we’ll be dead.” The team started selecting their weapons first. “Three-ninety caliber?” Fred asked. “Yes,” John replied. “Everyone take guns that use .390-caliber ammunition so we can share clips if wehave to. Except Linda.” Linda gravitated to a matte-black long-barreled rifle—the SRS99C-S2 AM. The sniper rifle system hadmodular sections: scopes, stocks, barrels, even the firing mechanism could be swapped. She quicklystripped the rifle down and reconfigured it. She assembled a flash-and-sound suppression barrel, andthen to compensate for the lower muzzle velocity, she increased the ammunition caliber to .450. Sheditched all the sights and scopes and settled for an integrated link to her helmet’s heads-up display. Shepocketed five extended ammunition clips. John also chose an MA2B, a cut-down version of the standard MA5B assault rifle. It was tough andreliable, with electronic targeting and an ammo supply indicator. It also had a recoil-reduction system,and could deliver an impressive fifteen rounds per second. He picked up a knife: twenty-centimeter blade, one serrated edge, nonreflective titanium carbide, andbalanced for throwing. John grabbed the panic button—a tiny single-shot emergency beacon. It had two settings. The red settingalerted thePioneer that it had hit the fan, and to come in guns blazing. The green setting merely markedthe location of the base for later assault by the UNSC. He took a double handful of ammo clips—then paused. He set them down and pocketed five. If they gotinto a firefight where he’d need that much firepower, their mission was over anyway. Everyone took similar equipment, with a few variations. Kelly selected a small computer pad with IRlinks. She also had their field medical kit. Fred packed a standard-issue lockbreaker. Linda selected three nav marker transmitters, each the size of a tick. The trackers could be adhered to anobject and would broadcast that object’s location to the Spartans’ heads-up displays. Sam hefted two medium-size backpacks—“damage packs.” They were filled with C-12, enough highexplosives to blow through three meters of battleship armor plate. “You have enough of that stuff?” Kelly asked him wryly. “You think I should take more?” Sam replied, and smiled. “Nothing like a little fireworks to celebratethe end of a mission.” “Everyone ready?” John asked. Sam’s smile disappeared and he slapped an extended clip into his MA2B. “Ready!” Kelly gave him John a thumbs-up. Fred and Linda nodded. “Then let’s go to work.” Chapter 10 1210 Hours, September 14, 2525 (Military Calendar) / Epsilon Eridani System, Eridanus 2 spacedock, civilian Cargo Ship,Laden (registry number F-0980W)“Spartan 117: in position. Next check-in at 0400.” John clicked off the microphone, encrypted themessage, and fed it into his COM relay. He triggered a secure burst transmission to theAthens , the ONIprowler ship on station a few AUs distant. He and his teammates climbed onto the upper girders. In silence, the team rigged a web of support netsso they could rest in relative comfort. Below them lay a hundred thousand liters of black water, andsurrounding them, two centimeters of stainless steel. Sam rigged the fill sensor so the reservoir’scomputer wouldn’t let any more water flow into the storage tank. The lights in their helmets cast apattern of crossing and crisscrossing reflection lines. A perfect hiding spot—all according to plan, John thought, and allowed himself a small grin of triumph. The tech specs that ONI had procured on theLaden showed a number of hydroponic pods mountedaround the ship’s carousel system—the massive water tanks used gravity feed to irrigate the ship’s spacegrowncrops. Perfect. They had easily slipped past the lone guard in theLaden ’s main cargo bay and into the nearly desertedcenter section. The water tank would mask their thermal signatures, and block any motion sensors. The only risky element entered the picture if the center section stopped spinning . . . things could getvery messy inside the tank, very fast. But John doubted that would happen. Kelly set up a tiny microwave relay outside the top hatch. She propped her data pad on her stomach andlinked to the ship’s network. “I’m in,” she reported. “There’s no AI or serious encryption . . . accessingtheir system now.” She tapped the pad a few more times and activated the intrusion software—the bestthat ONI could provide. A moment later the pad pulsed to indicate success. “They’ve got a nav trajectory to the asteroid belt. ETA is ten hours.” “Good work,” John said. “Team: we’ll sleep in shifts.” Sam, Fred, and Linda snapped off theirflashlights. The tank reverberated as theLaden ’s engines flared to life. The water tilted as they accelerated awayfrom the orbital docking station. John remembered Eridanus 2—vaguely recalled that it once was home. He wondered if his old school,his family, were still there—He squelched his curiosity. Speculation made for a fine mental exercise, but the mission came first. Hehad to stay alert—or failing that, grab some sleep so he would be alert when he needed to be. ChiefMendez must have told them a thousand times: “Rest can be as deadly a weapon as a pistol or grenade.” “I’ve got something,” Kelly whispered, and handed him her data pad. It displayed the cargo manifest for theLaden . John scrolled down the list: water, flour, milk, frozenorange juice, welding rods, superconducting magnets for a fusion reactor . . . no mention of weapons. “I give up,” he said. “What am I looking for?” “I’ll give you a hint,” Kelly replied. “The Chief smokes them.” John flicked back through the list. There: Sweet William cigars. Next to them on the manifest was acrate of champagne, a Beta Centauri vintage. There were fast-chilled New York steaks, and Swisschocolates. These items were stored in a secure locker. They had the same routing codes. “Luxury items,” Kelly murmured. “I bet they’re headed straight for a special delivery to Colonel Wattsor his officers.” “Good work,” John replied. “We’ll tag this stuff and follow it.” “Won’t be that easy,” Fred said from the darkness. He flicked on his flashlight and peered back at John. “There are a million ways this can go wrong. We’re going in without recon. I don’t like it.” “We only have one advantage on this mission,” John said. “The rebels have never been infiltrated—they’ll feel relatively safe and won’t be expecting us. But every extra second we stay . . . that’s anotherchance for us to be spotted. We’ll follow Kelly’s hunch.” “You questioning orders?” Sam asked Fred. “Scared?” There was a slight hint of challenge in his voice. Fred thought for a moment. “No,” he whispered. “But this is no training mission. Our targets won’t befiring stun rounds.” He sighed. “I just don’t want to fail.” “We’re not going to fail,” John told him. “We’ve accomplished every mission we’ve been on before.” That wasn’t entirely true: the augmentation mission had wiped out half of the Spartans. They weren’tinvincible. But John wasn’t scared. A little nervous, maybe—but he was ready. “Rotate sleep cycles,” John said. “Wake me up in four hours.” He turned over and quickly nodded off to the sound of the sloshing water. He dreamed of gravball and acoin spinning in the air. John caught it and yelled, “Eagle!” as he won again. He always won. Kelly nudged John’s shoulder and he was instantly awake, hand on his assault rifle. “We’re decelerating,” she whispered, and pointed her light into the water below. The liquid tilted at atwenty-degree inclination. “Lights off,” John ordered. They were plunged into total darkness. He popped the hatch and snaked the fiber-optic probe—attached to his helmet—through the crack. Allclear. They climbed out, then rappelled down the back of the ten-meter-tall tank. They donned their greasestainedcoveralls and removed their helmets. The black suits looked a little bulky beneath the workclothes, but the disguise would hold up to a cursory inspection. With their weapons and gear in duffelbags, they’d pass as crew . . . from a distance. They crept through a deserted corridor and into the cargo bay. They heard a million tiny metallic pingsas gravity settled the ship. TheLaden must be docking to a spinning station or a rotating asteroid. The cargo bay was a huge room, stacked to its ceiling with barrels and crates. There were massive tanksof oil. Automated robot forklifts scurried between rows, checking for items that might have come loosein transit. There was a terrific clang as a docking clamp grabbed the ship. “Cigars are this way,” Kelly whispered. She consulted her data pad, then tucked it back into her pocket. They moved out, clinging to the shadows. They stopped every few meters, listened, and made sure theirfields of fire were clear. Kelly held up her hand and made a fist. She pointed to the secure hatch on the starboard side of the hold. John signaled Fred and Kelly and motioned them to go forward. Fred used the lockbreaker on the doorand it popped open. They entered and closed it behind them. John, Sam, and Linda waited. There was a sudden motion and the Spartans snapped their weapons tofiring positions—A robot forklift passed down an adjacent aisle. The massive aft doors of the cargo hold parted with a hiss. Light spilled into the hold. A dozendockworkers dressed in coveralls entered. John gripped his MA2B tighter. One man looked down the aisle where they crouched in the shadows. He stooped, paused—John raised his weapon slowly, his hands steady, and sighted on the man’s chest. “Always shoot forcenter of mass,” Mendez had barked during weapons training. The man stood, stretched his back, andmoved on, whistling quietly to himself. Fred and Kelly returned, and Kelly opened and closed her hand, palm out—she had placed the marker. John grabbed his helmet from his duffel bag and slipped it on. He pinged the navigation marker and sawthe blue triangle flash once on his heads-up display. He returned Kelly’s thumbs-up and removed thehelmet. John stowed his helmet and MA2B and motioned for the rest of the team to do the same. They casuallywalked out of theLaden ’s aft cargo hold and onto the rebel base. The docking bay was hewn from solid rock. The ceiling stretched a kilometer high. Bright lightsoverhead effectively illuminated the place, looking like tiny suns in the sky. There were hundreds ofships docked within the cavern—tiny single craft, Mako-class corvettes, cargo freighters, and even acaptured UNSC Pelican dropship. Each craft was held by massive cranes that traveled on railroad tracks. The tracks led toward a series of large airlock doors. That’s how theLaden must have gotten inside. There were people everywhere: workers and men in crisp white uniforms. John’s first instinct was toseek cover. Every one of them was a potential threat. He wished he had his gun in hand. He remained calm and strode among these strangers. He had to set the right example for his team. If hisrecent encounter with the ODSTs in the gym of theAtlas had been any indication, he knew his teamwouldn’t interact well with the natives. John made his way past dockworkers and robotic trams full of cargo and vendors selling roasted meat onsticks. He walked toward a set of double doors set in the far rock wall, marked: PUBLIC SHOWERS. He pushed through and didn’t look back. The place was almost empty. One man was singing in the shower, and there were two rebel officersundressing near the towel dispensers. John led his team to the most distant corner of the locker room and hunkered down on one of thebenches. Linda sat with her back to them, on lookout duty. “So far so good,” John whispered. “This will be our fallback position if everything falls apart and we getseparated.” Sam nodded. “Okay—we have a lead on how to find the Colonel. Anyone have any ideas how to get offthis rock once we grab him? Back into theLaden ’s water tank?” “Too slow,” Kelly said. “We’ve got to assume that when Colonel Watt goes missing, his people aregoing to look for him.” “There was a Pelican on the dock,” John said. “We’ll take it. Now let’s figure out how to operate thecranes and airlocks.” Sam hefted his pack of explosives. “I know just the way to politely knock on those airlock doors. Don’tworry.” Sam tapped his left foot. He only did that when he was eager to move. Fred’s hands were clenched intofists; he might be nervous, but he had it under control. Kelly yawned. And Linda sat absolutely still. They were ready. John got his helmet, donned it, and checked the nav marker. “Bearing 320,” he said. “It’s on the move.” He picked up his gear. “And so are we.” They left the showers and strode through the dock, past massive drop doors and into a city. This part ofthe asteroid looked like a canyon carved into the rock; John could barely make out the ceiling faroverhead. There were skyscrapers and apartment buildings, factories, and even a small hospital. John ducked into an alley, slipped on his helmet, and pinpointed the blue nav marker. It overlay a cargotram that silently rolled down the street. There were three armed guards riding in the back. The Spartans followed at a discreet distance. John checked his exit routes. Too many people, and too many unknowns. Were the people here armed? Would they all engage if fighting started? A few of the people gave him strange looks. “Spread out,” he whispered to his team. “We look like we’re on a parade ground.” Kelly stepped up her pace and pulled ahead. Sam fell behind. Fred and Linda drifted to the right and left. The cargo tram turned and made its way slowly through a crowded street. It stopped at a building. Thestructure was twelve stories tall, with balconies on every floor. John guessed these were barracks. There were two armed guards in white uniforms at the front entrance. The three men in the tram got outand carried the crate inside. Kelly glanced at John. He nodded, giving her the go-ahead. She approached the two guards, smiling. John knew her smile wasn’t friendly. She was smiling becauseshe was finally getting a chance to put her training to the test. Kelly waved to the guard and pulled open the door. He asked her to stop and show her identification. She stepped inside, grabbed his rifle, twisted, and dragged him inside with her. The other guard stepped back and leveled his rifle. John sprang at him from behind, grabbed his neckand snapped it, then dragged his limp body inside. The entry room had cinderblock walls and a steel door with a swipe-card lock. A security cameradangled limply over Kelly’s head. The guard she had dragged in lay at her feet. She was already runninga cracking program on the lock, using her data pad. John retrieved his MA2B and covered her. Fred and Linda entered and slipped out of their coveralls,then donned their helmets. “Nav marker is moving,” Linda reported. “Mark 270, elevation ten meters, twenty . . . thirty-five andholding. I’d say that’s the top floor.” Sam entered, pulled the door shut behind him, and then jammed the lock. “All clear out there.” The inner door clicked. “Door’s open,” Kelly said. John, Kelly, and Sam slipped out of their coveralls as Fred and Linda covered them. John activated themotion and thermal displays in his helmet. The target sight glowed as he raised his MA2B. “Go,” John said. Kelly pushed open the door. Linda stepped in and to the right. John entered and took the left. Two guards were seated behind the lobby’s reception desk. Another man, without a uniform, stood infront of the desk, waiting to be helped; two more uniformed men stood by the elevator. Linda shot the three near the desk. John eliminated the targets by the elevator. Five rounds—five bodies hit the floor. Fred entered and policed the bodies, dragging them behind the counter. Kelly moved to the stairwell, opened the door, and gave the all-clear signal. The elevator pinged and its doors opened. They all wheeled, rifles leveled . . . but the car was empty. John exhaled, then motioned them to take the stairs; Kelly took point. Sam brought up the rear. Theysilently went up nine double flights of stairs. Kelly halted on an upper landing. She pointed to the interior of the building, then pointed up. John detected faint blurs of heat on the twelfth floor. They’d have to pick a better route, a way in that noone would expect. John opened the door. There was an empty hallway. No targets. He went to the elevator doors and pried them open. Then he turned on his black suit’s cooling elementsto mask his thermal signature. The others did the same . . . and faded from his thermal imaging display. John and Sam climbed up the elevator cable. John glanced down: a thirty-meter plunge into darkness. He might survive that fall. His bones wouldn’t break, but there would be internal damage. And it wouldcertainly compromise their mission. He tightened his grip on the cable and didn’t look down again. When they had climbed up the last three floors, they braced themselves in the corners by the closedelevator door. Kelly and Fred snaked up the cable after them. They braced in the far corners to overlaptheir fields of fire. Linda came up last. She climbed as far as she could, hooked her foot on a cross brace,and hung upside down. John held up three fingers, two, then one, and then he and Sam silently pulled open the elevator doors. There were five guards standing in the room. They wore light body armor and helmets and carried oldermodelHMG-38 rifles. Two of them turned. Kelly, Fred, and Linda opened fire. The walnut paneling behind the guards became pockmarked withbullet holes and was spattered with blood. The team slid inside the room, moving quickly and quietly. Sam policed the guards’ weapons. There were two doors. One led to a balcony; the other featured a peephole. Kelly checked the balcony,then whispered over the channel in their helmets: “This overlooks the alley between buildings. Noactivity.” John checked the nav marker. The blue triangles flashed a position directly behind the other door. Sam and Fred flanked the door. John couldn’t get any reading on motion or thermal. The walls wereshielded. There were too many unknowns and not enough time. The situation wasn’t ideal. They knew there were at least three men inside—the ones who had carriedthe crate upstairs. And there might be more guards . . . and to complicate the situation, their target had tobe taken alive. John kicked the door in. He took in the entire situation at a glance. He was standing on the threshold of a sumptuous apartment. There was a wet bar boasting shelves of amber-filled bottles. A large, round bed dominated the corner,decorated with shimmering silk sheets. Windows on all sides had sheer white curtains—John’s helmetautomatically compensated for the glare. Red carpet covered the floor. The crate with the cigars andchampagne sat in the center of the room. It was black and armored, sealed tight against the vacuum ofspace. There were three men standing behind the armored crate, and one man crouched behind them. ColonelRobert Watts—their “package.” John didn’t have a clear shot. If he missed, he could hit the Colonel. The three men, however, didn’t have that problem. They fired. John dove to his left. He caught three rounds in his side—knocking the breath from his body. One bulletpenetrated his black suit. He felt it ping off his ribs and pain slashed through him like a red-hot razor. He ignored the wound and rolled to his feet. He had a clear line of fire. He squeezed the trigger once—athree-round burst caught the center guard in the forehead. Sam and Fred wheeled around the door frame, Sam high, Fred low. Their silenced weapons coughed andthe remaining pair of guards went down. Watts remained behind the crate. He brandished his pistol. “Stop!” he screamed. “My men are coming. You think I’m alone? You’re all dead. drop your weapons.” John crawled to the wet bar and crouched there. He willed the pain inside his stomach to go away. Hesignaled Sam and Fred and held up two fingers, then pointed the fingers over his head. Sam and Fred fired a burst of rounds over Watts. He ducked. John vaulted over the bar and leaped onto his quarry. He grabbed the pistol and wrenched it out of hishand, breaking the man’s index finger and thumb. John snaked his arm around Watts’s neck and chokedthe struggling man into near-unconsciousness. Kelly and Linda entered. Kelly took out a syringe and injected Watts—enough polypseudomorphine tokeep him sedated for the better part of a day. Fred fell back to cover the elevator. Sam entered and crouched by the windows, watching the streetbelow for any signs of trouble. Kelly went to John and peeled back his black suit. Her gloves were slick with his blood. “The bullet isstill inside,” she said, and bit her lower lip. “There’s a lot of internal bleeding. Hang on.” She dug a tinybottle from her belt and inserted the nozzle into the bullet hole. “This might sting a little.” The self-sealing biofoam filled John’s abdominal cavity. It also stung like a hundred ants crawlingthrough his innards. She pulled the bottle out and taped up the hole. “You’re good for a few hours,” shesaid, and then gave him a hand up. John felt shaky, but he’d make it. The foam would keep him from bleeding to death and stave off theshock . . . for a while, at least. “Incoming vehicles,” Sam announced. “Six men entering the building. Two taking up positionoutside . . . but just the front.” “Get our package inside that crate and seal it up,” John ordered. He left the room, got his duffel, and went to the balcony. He secured a rope and tossed it down twelvestories into the alley. He rappelled down, took a second to scan the alley for threats, then clicked histhroat mike once—the all-clear signal. Kelly snapped a descent rig on the crate and pushed it off the balcony. It zipped down the line andthudded to a halt at the bottom. A moment later the rest of the team glided down the rope. They quickly donned their coveralls. Sam and Fred carried the crate as they entered the adjacentbuilding. They exited on the street a half block down and walked as quickly as they could back to thedocks. Dozens of uniformed men ran from the dock toward the city. No one challenged them. They reentered the now-deserted public showers. “Everyone check your seals,” John said. “Sam, you go ring the doorbell. Meet us on the dropship.” Sam nodded and sprinted out of the building, both packs of C-12 looped around his shoulder. John took out the panic button. He triggered the green-mode transmission and tossed it into an emptylocker. If they didn’t make it out, at least the UNSC fleet would know where to find the rebel base. “Your suit is breached,” Kelly reminded John. “We better get to the ship now, before Sam sets off hisfireworks.” Linda and Fred checked the seals on the crate then carried it out. Kelly took point and John brought upthe rear. They boarded the Pelican dropship and John sized up her armaments—dented and charred armor, a pairof old, out-of-date 40mm chain guns. The rocket pods had been removed. Not much of a warhorse. There was a flash of lightning at the far end of the dock. The thunder roiled through the deck, and thenthrough John’s stomach. While John watched, a gaping hole materialized in the airlock door amid a cloud of smoke and shatteredmetal. Black space loomed beyond. With an earsplitting roar, the atmosphere held in the docks abruptlytransformed into a hurricane. People, crates, and debris were blasted out of the ragged tear. John pulled himself inside the dropship and prepared to seal the main hatch. He watched as emergency doors descended over the breached airlock. There was a second explosion,and the drop door paused, then fell and clattered to the deck, crushing a light transport vessel underneath. Behind them, large bay doors closed, sealing the docks off from the city. Dozens of workers still on thedocks ran for their lives, but didn’t make it. Sam sprinted across the deck, perfectly safe inside his sealed black suit. He cycled through the Pelican’semergency airlock. “Back door’s open,” he said with a grin. Kelly fired up the engines. The Pelican lifted, maneuvered through the dock, and then out through theblasted hole and into open space. She pushed the throttle to maximum burn. Behind them, the insurgent base looked like any other rock in the asteroid belt . . . but this rock wasventing atmosphere and starting to rotate erratically. After five minutes at full power, Kelly eased the engines back. “We’ll hit the extraction point in twohours,” she said. “Check on our prisoner,” John said. Sam popped open the crate. “The seals held. Watts is still alive and has a steady pulse,” he said. “Good,” John grunted. He winced as the throbbing pain in his side increased. “Something bothering you?” Kelly asked. “How’s that biofoam holding up?” “It’s fine,” he said without even looking at the hole in his side. “I’ll make it.” He knew he should feel elated—but instead he just felt tired. Something didn’t sit right about theoperation. He wondered about all the dead dockworkers and civilians back there. None of them weredesignated targets. And yet, weren’t they all rebels on that asteroid? On the other hand, it was like the Chief said—he had followed his orders, completed his mission, andgotten his people out alive. What more did he want? John stuffed his doubts deep in the back of his mind. “Nothing’s wrong,” he said, and squeezed Kelly’s shoulder. John smiled. “What could be wrong? Wewon.” Chapter 11 0600 Hours, November 2, 2525 (Military Calendar) / Epsilon Eridani System, Reach UNSCMilitary Complex, planet ReachJohn wondered who had died. The Spartans had been called to muster in their dress uniforms only oncebefore: funeral detail. The Purple Heart awarded to him after his last mission glistened on his chest. He made sure it waspolished to a high sheen. It stood out against the black wool of his dress jacket. Occasionally John wouldlook at it, and make sure it was still there. He sat in the third row of the amphitheater and faced the center platform. The other Spartans sat quietlyon the concentric rings of risers. Spotlights flicked on the empty stage. He had been in Reach’s secure briefing chamber before. This is where Dr. Halsey had told them theywere going to be soldiers. This is where his life had changed and he had been given a purpose. Chief Mendez entered the room and marched to the center platform. He wore his black dress uniform aswell. His chest was covered with Silver and Bronze Stars, three Purple Hearts, the Red Legion of Honoraward, and a rainbow of campaign ribbons. He had recently shaved his head. The Spartans rose and stood at attention. Dr. Halsey entered. She looked older to John, the wrinkles at the corners of her eyes and mouth morepronounced, streaks of gray in her dark hair. But her blue eyes were as sharp as ever. She wore grayslacks, a black shirt, and her glasses hung about her neck on a gold chain. “Admiral on deck,” Mendez announced. They all snapped straighter. A man ten years Dr. Halsey’s senior strode to the stage. His short silver hair looked like a steel helmet. His gait had a strange lope to it—what crewmen called “space walk”—from spending too much time inmicrogravity. He wore a simple, unadorned black dress UNSC uniform. No medals or campaignribbons. The insignia on the forearm of his jacket, however, was unmistakable: the single gold star of aRear Admiral. “At ease, Spartans,” he said. “I’m Admiral Stanforth.” The Spartans took their seats in unison. Dust swirled onstage and collected into a robed figure. Its face was obscured within the shadows of itshood. John could discern no hands at the end of its sleeves. “This is Beowulf,” Admiral Stanforth said as he gestured to the ghostly creature. Stanforth’s voice wascalm, but distaste was evident on his face. “He is our AI attaché with the Office of Naval Intelligence.” He turned away from the AI. “We have several important issues to cover this morning, so let’s getstarted.” The lights dimmed. An amber sun appeared in the center of the room with three planets in close orbit. “This is Harvest,” he said. “Population of approximately three million. Although on the periphery ofUNSC-controlled space, this world is one of our more productive and peaceful colonies.” The holographic view zoomed in on the surface of the world and showed grasslands and forests and athousand lakes swarming with schools of fish. “As of military calendar February 3, at 1423 hours, the Harvest orbital platform made long range radarcontact with this object.” A blurry outline appeared over the stage. “Spectroscopic analysis proved inconclusive,” AdmiralStanforth said. “The object is constructed of material unknown to us.” A molecular absorption graph appeared on a side screen, spikes and jagged lines indicating the relativeproportions of elements. Beowulf raised a cloaked arm and the image darkened. The words CLASSIFIED—EYES ONLYappeared over the blackened data. Admiral Stanforth shot a glare at the AI. “Contact with Harvest,” he continued, “was lost shortly thereafter. The Colonial Military Administrationsent the scout shipArgo to investigate. That ship arrived in-system on April twentieth, but other than abrief transmission to confirm their exit Slipstream position, no further reports were made. “In response, Fleet Command assembled a battle group to investigate. The group consisted of thedestroyerHeracles , commanded by Captain Veredi, as well as the frigatesArabia andVostok . Theyentered the Harvest System on October seventh and discovered the following.” The holograph of the planet Harvest changed. The lush fields and rolling hills transformed, morphinginto a cratered, barren desert. Thin gray sunlight reflected off a glassy crust. Heat wavered from thesurface. Isolated regions glowed red. “This is what was left of the colony.” The Admiral paused for a moment to stare at the image, and thencontinued. “We assume that all inhabitants are lost.” Three million lives lost. John couldn’t fathom the raw force it had taken to kill so many—for a momenthe was torn between horror and envy. He glanced at the Purple Heart pinned to his chest andremembered his lost comrades. How did one simple bullet wound compare with so many wasted lives? He was suddenly no longer proud of the decoration. “And this is what theHeracles battlegroup found in orbit,” Admiral Stanforth told them. The blurry outline that was still visible, hanging in the air, sharpened into crisp focus. It looked smoothand organic, and the hull possessed an odd, opalescent sheen—it looked more like the carapace of anexotic insect than the metal hull of a spacecraft. Recessed into the aft section were pods that pulsed witha purple-white glow. The prow of the craft was swollen like the head of a whale. John thought itpossessed an odd, predatory beauty. “The unidentified vessel,” the Admiral said, “launched an immediate attack against our forces.” Blue flashes strobed from the ship. Red motes of light then appeared along its hull. Bolts of energycoalesced into a fiery smear against the blackness of space. The deadly flashes of light impacted ontheArabia , splashed across its hull. Its meter of armor plating instantly boiled away, and a plume ofignited atmosphere burst from the breach in the ship’s hull. “Those were pulse lasers,” AdmiralStanforth explained, “and—if this record is to be believed—some kind of self-guided, superheatedplasma weapon.” TheHeracles andVostok launched salvos of missiles toward the craft. The enemy’s lasers shot halfbefore they reached their target. The balance of the missiles impacted, detonated into blossoms offire . . . that quickly faded. The strange ship shimmered with a semitransparent silver coating, whichthen vanished. “They also seem to have some reflective energy shield.” Admiral Stanforth took a deep breath and hisfeatures hardened into a mask of grim resolve. “TheVostok andArabia were lost with all hands. TheHeracles jumped out of the system, but due to the damage she sustained, it took several weeks forCaptain Veredi to make it back to Reach. “These weapons and defensive systems are currently beyond our technology. Therefore . . . this craft isof nonhuman origin.” He paused, then added, “The product of a race with technology far in advance ofour own.” A murmur buzzed through the chamber. “We have, of course, developed a number of first contact scenarios,” the Admiral continued, “andCaptain Veredi followed our established protocols. We had hoped that contact with a new race would bepeaceful. Obviously this was not the case—the alien vessel did not open fire until our task forceattempted to initiate communications.” He paused, considering his words. “Fragments of the enemy’s transmissions were intercepted,” hecontinued. “A few words have been translated. We believe they call themselves ‘The Covenant.’ However, before opening fire, the alien ship broadcast the following message in the clear.” He gestured at Beowulf, who nodded. A moment later, a voice thundered from the amphitheater’sspeakers. John stiffened in his seat when he heard it; the voice from the speakers sounded odd, artificial—strangely calm and formal, but laden with rage and menace. “Your destruction is the will of the Gods . . . and we are their instrument.” John was awestruck. He stood. “Yes, Spartan?” Stanforth said. “Sir, is this a translation?” “No,” the Admiral replied. “They broadcast this to us in our language. We believe they used some kindof translation system to prepare the message . . . but it means they’ve been studying us for some time.” John took his seat. “As of November 1, the UNSC has been ordered to full alert,” Stanforth said. “Vice Admiral PrestonCole is mobilizing the largest fleet action in human history to retake the Harvest System and confrontthis new threat. Their transmission made one thing perfectly clear: they’re looking for a fight.” Only years of military discipline kept John rooted to his seat—otherwise he would have stood up andasked to volunteer on the spot. He would have given anything to go and fight. This was the threat he andthe other Spartans had been training for all their lives—he was certain of it. Not scattered rebels, pirates,or political dissidents. “Because of this UNSC-wide mobilization,” Admiral Stanforth continued, “your training schedule willbe accelerated to its final phase: Project MJOLNIR.” He stepped away from the podium and clasped his hands behind his back. “To that end, I’m afraid I haveanother unpleasant announcement.” He turned to the Chief. “Chief Petty Officer Mendez will bedeparting us to train the next group of Spartans. Chief?” John grabbed the edge of the riser. Chief Mendez had always been there for them, the only constant inthe universe. Admiral Stanforth might as well have told him that Epsilon Eridani was leaving the ReachSystem. The Chief stepped to the podium and clasped its edges. “Recruits,” he said, “soon your training will be complete, and you will graduate to the rank of PettyOfficer Second Class in the UNSC. One of the first things you will learn is that change is part of asoldier’s life. You will make and lose friends. You will move. This is part of the job.” He looked to his audience. His dark eyes rested on each one of them. He nodded, seemingly satisfiedwith what he saw. “The Spartans are the finest group of soldiers I have ever encountered,” he said. “It has been a privilegeto train you. Never forget what I’ve tried to teach you—duty, honor, and sacrifice for the greater good ofhumanity are the qualities that make you the best.” He was silent a moment, searching for more words. But finding none, he stood at attention and saluted. “Attention,” John barked. The Spartans rose as one and saluted the Chief. “Dismissed, Spartans,” Chief Mendez said. “And good luck.” He finished his salute. The Spartans snapped down their arms. They hesitated, and then reluctantly filed out of the amphitheater. John stayed behind. He had to talk to Chief Mendez. Dr. Halsey spoke briefly with the Chief and the Admiral, then she and the Admiral left together. Beowulf backed toward the far wall and faded away like a ghost. The Chief gathered his hat, spotted John, and walked to him. He nodded to the hologram of the scorchedcolony, Harvest, still rotating in the air. “One final lesson, Petty Officer,” he said. “What tactical optionsdo you have when attacking a stronger opponent?” “Sir!” John said. “There are two options. Attack swiftly and with full force at their weakest point—takethem out quickly before they have a chance to respond.” “Good,” he said. “And the other option?” “Fall back,” John replied. “Engage in guerrilla actions or get reinforcements.” The Chief sighed. “Those are the correct answers,” he said, “but it may not be enough to be correct thistime. Sit, please.” John sat, and the Chief settled next to him on the riser. “There’s a third option.” The Chief turned his hat over in his hands. “An option that others mayeventually consider. . . .” “Sir?” “Surrender,” the Chief whispered. “That, however, is never an option for the likes of you and me. Wedon’t have the luxury of backing down.” He glanced up at Harvest—a glittering ball of glass. “And Idoubt that an enemy like this willlet us surrender.” “I think I understand, sir.” “Make sure you do. And make sure you don’t let anyone else give up.” He gazed into the shadowsbeyond the center platform. “Project MJOLNIR will make the Spartans into something . . . new. Something I could never forge them into. I can’t fully explain—that damned ONI spook is still herelistening—just trust Dr. Halsey.” The Chief dug into his jacket pocket. “I was hoping to see you before they shipped me out. I havesomething for you.” He set a small metal disk on the riser between them. “When you first came here,” the Chief said, “you fought the trainers when they took this away from you—broke a few fingers as I recall.” His chiseled features cracked into a rare smile. John picked up the disk and examined it. It was an ancient silver coin. He flipped it between his fingers. “It has an eagle on one side,” Mendez said. “That bird is like you—fast and deadly.” John closed his fingers around the quarter. “Thank you, sir.” He wanted to say that he was strong and fast because the Chief had made him so. He wanted to tell himthat he was ready to defend humanity against this new threat. He wanted to say that without the Chief,he would have no purpose, no integrity, and no duty to perform. But John didn’t have the words. He justsat there. Mendez stood. “It has been an honor to serve with you.” Instead of saluting, he held out his hand. John got to his feet. He took the Chief’s hand and they shook. It took a great deal of effort—everyinstinct screamed at him to salute. “Good-bye,” Chief Mendez said. He turned briskly on his heel and strode from the room. John never saw him again. Chapter 12 1750 Hours, November 27, 2525 (Military Calendar) / UNSC frigateCommonwealth en route to theUNSC Damascus Materials Testing Facility, planet Chi Ceti 4The view screen in the bunkroom of the UNSC frigateCommonwealth clicked on as the ship enterednormal space. Ice particles showered the external camera and gave the distant yellow sun, Chi Ceti, aghostly ring. John watched and continued to ponder the wordMjolnir as they sped in-system. He had looked it up inthe education database. Mjolnir was the hammer used by the Norse god of thunder. Project MJOLNIRhad to be some kind of weapon. At least he hoped it was; they neededsomething to fight the Covenant. If it was a weapon, though, why was it here at the Damascus testing facility, on the very edge of UNSCcontrolledspace? He had only even heard of this system twenty-four hours ago. He turned and surveyed the squad. Although this bunkroom had one hundred beds, the Spartans stillclustered together, playing cards, polishing boots, reading, exercising. Sam sparred with Kelly—although she had to slow herself down considerably to give him a chance. John was reminded that he didn’t like being on starships. The lack of control was disturbing. If hewasn’t stuck in “the freezer”—the starship’s cramped, unpleasant cryo chamber—he was left waitingand wondering what their next mission would be. During the last three weeks the Spartans had handled a variety of minor missions for Dr. Halsey. “Tyingup loose ends,” she had called it. Putting down rebel factions on Jericho VII. Removing a black-marketbazaar near the Roosevelt military base. Each mission had brought them closer to the Chi Ceti System. John had made sure every member of his squad had participated in these missions. They had performedflawlessly. There had been no losses. Chief Mendez would have been proud of them. “Spartan-117,”Dr. Halsey’s voice blared over the loudspeaker.“Report to the bridge immediately.” John snapped to attention and keyed the intercom. “Yes, ma’am!” He turned to Sam. “Get everyoneready, in case we’re needed. On the double.” “Affirmative,” Sam said. “You heard the Petty Officer. Dog those cards. Get into uniform, soldier!” John double-timed it to the elevator and punched the code for the bridge. Gravity faded out and thenback again as the elevator passed between rotating sections of the ship. The doors parted and he stepped onto the bridge. Every wall had a screen. Some showed stars and thedistant red smear of a nebula. Other screens displayed the fusion reactor status and spectrums ofmicrowave broadcasts in the system. A brass railing ringed the center of the bridge, and within sat four Junior Lieutenants at their stations: navigation, weapons, communications, and ship operations. John halted and saluted Captain Wallace, then nodded to Dr. Halsey. Captain Wallace stood with his right arm crooked behind his back. His left arm was missing from theelbow down. John remained saluting until the Captain returned the gesture. “Over here, please,” Dr. Halsey said. “I want you to see this.” John walked across the rubberized deck and gave his full attention to the screen Dr. Halsey and CaptainWallace were scrutinizing. It displayed deconvoluted radar signals. It looked like tangled yarn to John. “There—” Dr. Halsey pointed to a blip on the screen. “It’s there again.” Captain Wallace stroked his dark beard, thinking, then said, “That puts our ghost at eighty millionkilometers. Even if it were a ship, it would take a full hour to get within weapons range. And besides—” He waved at the screen. “—it’s gone again.” “May I suggest that we go to battle stations, Captain,” Dr. Halsey told him. “I don’t see the point,” he said condescendingly; the Captain was clearly less than pleased about havinga civilian on his bridge. “We haven’t let this be widely known,” she said, “but when the aliens were first detected at Harvest,they appeared at extreme range . . . and then they were suddenly much closer.” “An intrasystem jump?” John asked. Dr. Halsey smiled at him. “Correctly surmised, Spartan.” “That’s not possible,” Captain Wallace remarked. “Slipstream space can’t be navigated that accurately.” “You meanwe cannot navigate with that kind of accuracy,” she said. The Captain clenched and unclenched his jaw. He clicked the intercom. “General quarters: all hands tobattle stations. Seal bulkheads. I repeat: all hands, battle stations. This is not a drill. Reactors to ninetypercent. Come about to course one two five.” The bridge lights darkened to a red hue. The deck rumbled beneath John’s boots and the entire ship tiltedas it changed heading. Pressure doors slammed shut and sealed John on the bridge. TheCommonwealth stabilized on her new heading, and Dr. Halsey crossed her arms. She leaned overand whispered to John, “We’ll be using theCommonwealth ’s dropship to go to the testing facility on ChiCeti Four. We have to get to Project MJOLNIR.” She turned back and watched the radar screen. “Beforethey do. So get the others ready.” “Yes, ma’am.” John keyed the intercom. “Sam, muster the squad in Bay Alpha. I want that Pelicanloaded and ready for drop in fifteen minutes.” “We’ll have it done in ten,”Sam replied.“Faster if those Longsword interceptor pilots get out of ourway.” John would have given anything to be belowdecks with the others. He felt as if he were being left behind. The radar screen flashed with blobs of eerie green light . . . almost as if the space aroundtheCommonwealth were boiling. The collision alarm sounded. “Brace for impact!” Captain Wallace said. He laced his arm around the brass railing. John grabbed an emergency handhold on the wall. Something appeared three thousand kilometers off theCommonwealth ’s prow. It was a sleek oval with asingle seam running along its lateral edge from stem to stern. Tiny lights winked on and off along itshull. A faint purple-tinged glow emitted from the tail. The ship was only a third the size oftheCommonwealth . “A Covenant ship,” Dr. Halsey said, and she involuntarily backed away from the view screens. Captain Wallace scowled. “COM officer: send a signal to Chi Ceti—see if they can send us somereinforcements.” “Aye, sir.” Blue flashes flickered along the hull of the alien ship—so bright that even filtered through the externalcamera, they still made John’s eyes water. The outer hull of theCommonwealth sizzled and popped. Three screens filled with static. “Pulse lasers!” the lieutenant at the ops station screamed. “Communication dish destroyed. Armor insections three and four at twenty-five percent. Hull breach in section three. Sealing now.” TheLieutenant swiveled in his seat, sweat beaded on his forehead. “Ship AI core memory overloaded,” hesaid. With the AI offline, the ship could still fire weapons and navigate through Slipstream space, but Johnknew it would take more time to make jump calculations. “Come to heading zero three zero, declination one eight zero,” Caption Wallace ordered. “Arm Archermissile pods A through F. And give me a firing solution.” “Aye aye,” the navigation and weapons officers said. “A through F pods armed.” They furiously tappedaway on their keypads. Seconds ticked by. “Firing solution ready, sir.” “Fire.” “Pods A through F firing!” TheCommonwealth had twenty-six pods, each loaded with thirty Archer high-explosive missiles. Onscreen, pods A through F opened, and launched—180 plumes of rocket exhaust that traced a path fromtheCommonwealth to the alien ship. The enemy changed course, rotated so that the top of the ship faced the incoming missiles. It then movedstraight up at an alarming speed. The Archer missiles altered their trajectory to track the ship, but half their number streaked past thetarget, clean misses. The others impacted. Fire covered the skin of the alien ship. “Good work, Lieutenant,” Captain Wallace said, and he clapped the young officer on the shoulder. Dr. Halsey frowned and stared at the screen. “No,” she whispered. “Wait.” The fire flared, then dimmed. The skin of the alien ship rippled like heat wavering off a hot road in thesummer. It fluttered with a metallic silver sheen, then brilliant white—and the fire faded, revealing theship beneath. It was completely undamaged. “Energy shields,” Dr. Halsey muttered. She tapped her lower lip, thinking. “Even ships this small haveenergy shielding.” “Lieutenant,” the Captain barked at the nav officer. “Cut main engines and fire maneuvering thrusters. Rotate and track so that we’re pointing at that thing.” “Aye aye, sir.” The distant rumbling of theCommonwealth ’s main engines dimmed and stopped and she turned about. Her inertia kept the ship speeding toward the testing facility—now flying backward. “What are you doing, Captain?” Dr. Halsey asked. “Arm the MAC,” Captain Wallace told the weapons officer. “A heavy round.” John understood: Turning your back to an enemy only gave them an advantage. The MAC—Magnetic Accelerator Cannon—was theCommonwealth ’s main weapon. It fired a superdenseferric tungsten shell. The tremendous mass and velocity of the projectile obliterated most ships onimpact. Unlike the Archer missiles, a MAC round was an unguided projectile; the firing solution had tobe perfect in order to hit the target—not an easy thing to do when both ships were moving rapidly. “MAC capacitors charging,” the weapons officer announced. The Covenant ship turned its side toward theCommonwealth . “Yes,” the Captain murmured. “Give me a bigger target.” Pinpoints of blue light glowed and then flared along the alien hull. The tactical view screens on the nose of theCommonwealth went dead. John heard sizzling overhead—then the muffled thumps of explosive decompressions. “More pulse laser hits,” the ops officer reported. “Armor in section three through seven down to fourcentimeters. Navigation dish destroyed. Hull breaches on decks two, five, and nine. We have a leak inthe port fuel tanks.” The Lieutenant’s hand shakily danced over the controls. “Pumping fuel to starboardreverse tanks. Sealing sections.” John shifted on his feet. He had to move. Act. Standing here—unable to get to his squad, not doinganything—was counter to every fiber of his being. “MAC at one hundred percent,” the weapons officer shouted. “Ready to fire!” “Fire!” Captain Wallace ordered. The lights on the bridge dimmed and theCommonwealth shuddered. The MAC bolt launched throughspace—a red-hot metal slug moving at thirty thousand meters per second. The Covenant ship’s engines flared to life and the ship veered away——Too late. The heavy round closed and slammed into the target’s prow. The Covenant ship reeled backward through space. Its energy shields shimmered and glowed lightningbright. . . then flickered, dimmed, and went out. The bridge crew let out a victory cheer. Except Dr. Halsey. John watched the view screen as she adjusted the camera controls and zoomed in onthe Covenant ship. The vessel’s erratic spinning slowed and it came to a stop. The ship’s nose was crumpled andatmosphere vented into vacuum. Tiny fires flickered inside. The ship slowly came about and startedback toward them—gaining speed. “It should have been destroyed,” she whispered. Tiny red blobs appeared on the hull of the Covenant ship. They glowed and intensified and driftedtogether, collecting along the lateral line of the craft. Captain Wallace said, “Make ready another heavy round.” “Aye aye,” the weapons officer said. “Charge at thirty percent. Firing solution online, sir.” “No,” Dr. Halsey said. “Evasive maneuvers, Captain. Now!” “I won’t have my command second-guessed, ma’am.” The Captain turned to face her. “And with respect,Doctor , second-guessed by someone with no combat experience.” He stiffened and placed his handbehind his back. “I cannot have you removed from the bridge because the bulkheads are sealed . . . butanother outburst like that, Doctor, and Iwill have you gagged.” John shot a quick glance to Dr. Halsey. Her face flushed—he couldn’t tell from shame or rage. “MAC at fifty percent charge.” The red light continued to collect along the lateral line of the Covenant ship until it was a solid band. Itbrightened. “Eighty percent charge.” “They’re turning, sir,” the nav officer announced. “She’s coming to starboard.” “Ninety-five percent charge—one hundred,” the weapons officer announced. “Send them to Hades, Lieutenant. Fire.” The lights dimmed again. TheCommonwealth shuddered and a bolt of thunder and fire tore through theblackness. The Covenant ship stood its ground. The bloodred light that had pooled on its lateral line burst forth—streaked toward theCommonwealth , passing the MAC round a mere kilometer away. The red lightglowed and pulsed almost as if it were liquid; its edges roiled and fluttered. It elongated into a teardropof ruby light five meters long. “Evasive maneuvers,” Captain Wallace cried. “Emergency thrusters to port!” TheCommonwealth slowly moved out of the trajectory path of the Covenant’s energy weapon. The MAC round struck the Covenant vessel amidships. Its shield shimmered and bubbled . . . thendisappeared. The MAC round punched through the craft and sent it spinning out of control. The inbound ball of light moved, too. It started tracking the Commonwealth. “Engines—full power astern,” the Captain ordered. TheCommonwealth rumbled and slowed. The light should have sped past them; instead, it sharply arced and struck her port amidships. The air filled with a popping and sizzling. TheCommonwealth listed to starboard, then rolled completelyover and continued to tumble. “Stabilize,” the Captain cried. “Starboard thrusters.” “Fire reported in sections one through twenty,” the ops officer said, panic creeping into his voice. “Decks two through seven in section one . . . have melted, sir. They’re gone.” It grew noticeably hotter on the bridge. Sweat beaded on John’s back and trickled down his spine. Hehad never felt so helpless. Were his teammates below decks alive or dead? “All port armor destroyed. Decks two through five in sections three, four, and five, are now out ofcontact, sir. It’s burning through us!” Captain Wallace stood without saying a word. He stared at their one remaining view screen. Dr. Halsey stepped forward. “Respectfully, Captain, I suggest that you alert the crew to get on respiratorpacks. Give them thirty seconds then vent the atmosphere on all decks, except the bridge.” The COM officer looked to the Captain. “Do it,” the Captain said. “Sound the alert.” “Deck thirteen destroyed,” the ops officer announced. “Fire is getting close the reactor. Hull structurestarting to buckle.” “Vent atmosphere now,” Captain Wallance ordered. “Aye aye,” the ops officer replied. There was the sound of thumping through the hull . . . then nothing. “Fire is dying out,” the ops officer said. “Hull temperature cooling—stabilizing.” “What the hell did they hit us with?” Captain Wallace demanded. “Plasma,” Dr. Halsey replied. “But not any plasma we know . . . they can actually guide its trajectorythrough space, without any detectable mechanism. Amazing.” “Captain,” the navigator said. “Alien ship is pursuing.” The Covenant vessel—a red-rimmed hole punched through its center—turned and started towardtheCommonwealth . “How . . . ?” Captain Wallace said unbelievingly. He quickly regained his wits. “Ready another MACheavy round.” The weapons officer slowly said, “MAC system destroyed, Captain.” “We’re sitting ducks, then,” the Captain murmured. Dr. Halsey leaned against the brass railing. “Not quite. TheCommonwealth carries three nuclear missiles,correct, Captain?” “A detonation this close would destroy us as well.” She frowned and cupped her hand to her chin, thinking. “Excuse me, sir,” John said. “The alien’s tactics thus far have been unnecessarily vicious—like those ofan animal. They didn’t have to take that second MAC round while they fired at us. But they wanted toposition themselves to fire. In my opinion sir, they would stop and engageanything that challengedthem.” The Captain looked to Dr. Halsey. She shrugged and then nodded. “The Longsword interceptors?” Captain Wallace turned his back to them and covered his face with his one hand. He sighed, nodded, andclicked on the intercom. “Longsword Squadron Delta, this is the Captain. Get your ships into the black, boys, and engage theenemy ship. I need you to need to buy us some time.” “Roger that, sir. We’re ready to launch. On our way.” “Turn us around,” the Captain told the nav officer. “Give me best speed on a vector toward Chi CetiFour orbit.” “Coolant leaks in the reactor, sir,” the ops officer said. “We can push the engines to thirty percent. Nomore.” “Give me fifty percent,” he said. He turned to the weapons officer. “Arm one of our Shiva warheads. Setproximity fuse to one hundred meters.” “Yes, sir.” TheCommonwealth spun about. John felt the change in his stomach and he tightened his grip on therailing. The spinning slowed, stopped, then the ship accelerated. “Reactor red-lining,” the ops officer reported. “Meltdown in twenty-five seconds.” Over the speakers, there was a crackle, a hiss of static, then:“Longsword interceptors engaging theenemy, sir.” On the remaining aft camera, there were flickers of light—the cold blue strobes of Covenant energyweapons, and the red-orange fireballs of the Longswords’ missiles. “Launch the missile,” the Captain said. “Meltdown in ten seconds.” “Missile away.” A plume of exhaust divided the darkness of space. “Five seconds to meltdown,” the ops officer said. “Four, three, two—” “Shunt drive plasma to space,” the Captain ordered. “Cut power to all systems.” The Covenant ship was silhouetted for a split second by pure white—then the view screen snapped off. The bridge lights went dead. John could see everything, though. The bridge officers, Dr. Halsey as she clutched onto the railing, andCaptain Wallace as he stood and saluted the pilots he had just sent to die. The hull of theCommonwealth rumbled and pinged as the shock wave enveloped them. It grew louder, asubsonic roar that shook John to his bones. The noise seemed to go on forever in the darkness. It faded . . . then it was completely silent. “Power us back up,” the Captain said. “Slowly. Give me ten percent from the reactors if we canmanage.” The bridge lights came on, dimly, but they worked. “Report,” the Captain ordered. “All sensors offline,” the op officer said. “Resetting backup computer. Hang on. Scanning now. Lots ofdebris. It’s hot back there. All Longsword interceptors vaporized.” He looked up, the color drained fromhis face. “Covenant ship . . . intact, sir.” “No,” the Captain said, and made a fist. “It’s moving off, though,” the op officer said with a visible sigh of relief. “Very slowly.” “What does it take to destroy one of those things?” the Captain whispered. “We don’t know if our weaponscan destroy them,” Dr. Halsey said. “But at least we know we can slowthem down.” The Captain stood straighter. “Best speed to the Damascus testing facility. We will execute a flyby orbit,and then proceed to a point twenty million kilometers distant to make repairs.” “Captain?” Dr. Halsey said. “A flyby?” “I have orders to get you to the facility and retrieve whatever Section Three has stowed there, ma’am. As we fly by, a dropship will take you and your—” He glanced at John. “—crew planet side. If theCovenant ship returns, we will be the bait to lure them away.” “I understand, Captain.” “We’ll rendezvous in orbit no later than 1900 hours.” Dr. Halsey turned to John. “We need to hurry. We don’t have much time—and there is a great deal Ineed to show the Spartans.” “Yes, ma’am,” John said. He took a long look at the bridge, and hoped he never had to return. Chapter 13 1845 Hours, November 27, 2525 (Military Calendar) / UNSC Damascus Materials Testing Facility,planetChi Ceti 4How far down was the testing facility? John and the other Spartans had been confined to a freightelevator for fifteen minutes, and the entire time it had been rapidly descending into the depths of ChiCeti 4. The last place John wanted to be was in another confined space. The doors finally slid open, and they emerged in what appeared to be a well-lit hangar. The far end hadan obstacle course set up with walls, trenches, dummy targets, and barbed wire. Three technicians and at least a dozen AI figures were busy in the center of the room. John had seen AIsbefore—one at a time. Déjà had once told the Spartans that there were technical reasons why AIscouldn’t be in the same place at the same time, but here were many ghostly figures: a mermaid, asamurai warrior, and one made entirely of bright light with comets trailing in her wake. Dr. Halsey cleared her throat. The technicians turned—the AIs vanished. John had been so focused on the holograms that he hadn’t noticed the forty Plexiglas mannequins set upin rows. On each was a suit of armor. The armor reminded John of the exoskeletons he had seen during training, but much less bulky, morecompact. He stepped closer to one and saw that the suit actually had many layers; the outer layerreflected the overhead lights with a faint green-gold iridescence. It covered the groin, outer thighs,knees, shins, chest, shoulders, and forearms. There was a helmet and an integrated power pack—muchsmaller than standard Marine “battery sacks.” Underneath were intermeshed layers of matte-black metal. “Project MJOLNIR,” Dr. Halsey said. She snapped her fingers and an exploded holographic schematicof the armor appeared next to her. “The armor’s shell is a multilayer alloy of remarkable strength. We recently added a refractive coating todisperse incoming energy weapon attacks—to counter our new enemies.” She pointed inside theschematic. “Each battlesuit also has a gel-filled layer to regulate temperature; this layer can reactivelychange in density. Against the skin of the operator, there is a moisture-absorbing cloth suit, andbiomonitors that constantly adjust the suit’s temperature and fit. There’s also an onboard computer thatinterfaces with your standard-issue neural implant.” She gestured and the schematic collapsed so that it only displayed the outer layers. As the imagechanged, John glimpsed veinlike microcapillaries, a dense sandwich of optical crystal, a circulatingpump, even what looked like a miniature fusion cell in the backpack. “Most importantly,” Dr. Halsey said, “the armor’s inner structure is composed of a new reactive metalliquid crystal. It is amorphous, yet fractally scales and amplifies force. In simplified terms, the armordoubles the wearer’s strength, and enhances the reaction speed of a normal human by a factor of five.” She waved her hand through the hologram. “There is one problem, however. This system is so reactivethat our previous tests with unaugmented volunteers ended in—” She searched for right word. “—failure.” She nodded to one of the technicians. A flat video appeared in the air. It showed a Marine officer, a Lieutenant, being fitted with theMJOLNIR armor. “Power is on,” someone said from offscreen. “Move your right arm, please.” The soldier’s arm blurred forward with incredible speed. The Marine’s stoic expression collapsed intoshock, surprise, and pain as his arm shattered. He convulsed—shuddered and screamed. As he jerked inpain John could hear the sounds of bones breaking. The man’s own agony-induced spasms were killing him. Halsey waved the video away. “Normal humans don’t have the reaction time or strength required todrive this system,” she explained. “You do. Your enhanced musculature and the metal and ceramiclayers that have been bonded to your skeletonshould be enough to allow you to harness the armor’spower. There has been . . . insufficient computer modeling, however. There will be some risk. You’llhave to move very slowly and deliberately until you get a feel for the armor and how it works. It cannotbe powered down, nor can the response be scaled back. Do you understand?” “Yes, Ma’am,” the Spartans answered. “Questions?” John raised his hand. “When do we get to try them, Doctor?” “Right now,” she said. “Volunteers?” Every Spartan raised a hand. Dr. Halsey allowed herself a tiny smile. She surveyed them, and finally, she turned to John. “You’ve always been lucky, John,” she said. “Let’s go.” He stepped forward. The technicians fitted him as the others watched and the pieces of the MJOLNIRsystem were assembled around his body. It was like a giant three-dimensional puzzle. “Please breathe normally,” Dr. Halsey told him, “but otherwise remain absolutely still.” John held himself as motionless as he could. The armor shifted and melded to the contours of his form. It was like a second skin . . . and much lighter than he had thought it would be. It heated, then cooled—then matched the temperature of his body. If he closed his eyes, he wouldn’t have known he wasencased. They set the helmet over his head. Health monitors, motion sensors, suit status indicators pulsed into life. A targeting reticle flickered onthe heads-up display. “Everyone move back,” Halsey ordered. The Spartans—from their expressions, they were concerned for him, but still intensely curious—cleareda ring with a radius of three meters around him. “Listen carefully to me, John,” Dr. Halsey said. “I just want you to think, and only think, about movingyour arm up to chest level. Stay relaxed.” He willed his arm to move, and his hand and forearm sprang forward to chest level. The slightest motiontranslated his thought to motion at lightning speed. It had been so fast—if he hadn’t been attached to hisarm, he might have missed that it had happened at all. The Spartans gasped. Sam applauded. Even lightning-fast Kelly seemed impressed. Dr. Halsey slowly coached John through the basics of walking and gradually built up the speed andcomplexity of his motions. After fifteen minutes he could walk, run, and jump almost without thinkingof the difference between suit motion and normal motion. “Petty Officer, run through the obstacle course,” Dr. Halsey said. “We will proceed to fit the otherSpartans. We don’t have a great deal of time left.” John snapped a salute without thinking. His hand bounced off his helmet and a dull ache throbbed in hishand. His wrist would be bruised. If his bones hadn’t been reinforced, he knew they would have beenpulverized. “Carefully, Petty Officer. Very carefully, please.” “Yes, ma’am!” John focused his mind on motion. He leaped over a three-meter-high wall. He punched at concretetargets—shattering them. He threw knives, sinking them up to their hafts into target dummies. He slidunder barbed wire as bullets zinged over his head. He stood, and let the rounds deflect off the armor. Tohis amazement, he actually dodged one or two of the rounds. Soon the other Spartans joined him on the course. Everyone ran awkwardly through the obstacles,though they had no coordination. John expressed his worries to Dr. Halsey. “It will come to you soonenough. You’ve already received some subliminal training during your last cryo sleep—” Dr. Halseytold them, “—now all you need is time to get used to the suits.” More worrisome to John was the realization that they’d have to learn how to work together all overagain. Their usual hand signals were too exaggerated now—a slight wave or tremble translated into fullforcepunches or uncontrolled vibrations. They would have to use the COM channels for the time being. As soon as he thought of this, his suit tagged and monitored the other MJOLNIR suits. Their standardissueUNSC neural chip—implanted in every UNSC soldier at induction—identified friendly soldiersand displayed them on their helmet HUDs. But this was different—all he had to do was concentrate onthem, and a secure COM channel opened. It was extremely efficient. And much to his relief, after drilling for thirty minutes, the Spartans had recovered all of their originalgroup coordination, and more. On one level, John moved the suit and, in return, it moved him. On another level, however,communication with his squad was so easy and natural, he could move and direct them as if they werean extension of his body. Over the hangar’s speakers, the Spartans heard Dr. Halsey’s voice: “Spartans, so far so good. If anyoneis experiencing difficulties with the suit or its controls, please report in.” “I think I’m in love,” Sam replied. “Oh—sorry, ma’am. I didn’t think that was an open channel.” “Flawless amplification of speed and power,” Kelly said. “It’s like I’ve been training in this suit foryears.” “Do we get to keep them?” John asked. “You’re the only ones who can use them, Petty Officer. Who else could we give them to? We—” Atechnician handed her a headset. “One moment, please. Report, Captain.” Captain Wallace’s voice broke over the COM channels.“We have contact with the Covenant ship,ma’am. Extreme range. Their Slipspace engines must still be damaged. They are moving toward us vianormal space.” “Your repair status?” she asked. “Long-range communications inoperable. Slipstream generators offline. MAC system destroyed. Wehave two fusion missiles and twenty Archer missile pods intact. Armor plating is at twenty percent.” There was a long hiss of static. “If you need more time . . . I can try and draw them away.” “No, Captain,” she replied, and carefully scrutinized John and the other armored Spartans. “We’re goingto have to fight them . . . and this time we have to win.” Chapter 14 2037 Hours, November 27, 2525 (Military Calendar) /In orbit over Chi Ceti 4John piloted the Pelican through the exit burn of their orbital path, then sent the ship toward the lastknown position of theCommonwealth . The frigate had moved ten million kilometers in-system fromtheir rendezvous point. Dr. Halsey sat in the copilot’s seat, fidgeting with her space suit. In the aft compartment were theSpartans, the three technicians from the Damascus facility, and a dozen spare MJOLNIR suits. Missing, however, were the AIs John had seen when they had first arrived. All Dr. Halsey had time to dowas remove their memory processor cubes. It was a tremendous waste to leave such expensiveequipment behind. Dr. Halsey examined the ship’s short-range detection gear, then said, “Captain Wallace may be trying touse Chi Ceti’s magnetic field to deflect the Covenant’s plasma weapon. Try and catch up, Petty Officer.” “Yes, ma’am.” John pushed the engines to 100 percent. “Covenant ship to port,” she said, “three million kilometers and closing on theCommonwealth .” John bumped up the magnification onscreen and spotted the ship. The alien vessel’s hull was bent at athirty-degree angle from the impact of the MAC heavy round, but it still moved at almost twice thespeed of theCommonwealth . “Doctor,” John asked, “does the MJOLNIR armor operate in vacuum?” “Of course,” she replied. “It was one of our first design considerations. The suit can recycle air forninety minutes. It’s shielded against radiation and EMP as well.” He then spoke to Sam over his COM link. “What kind of missiles is this bird carrying?” “Wait one, sir,”Sam replied. His voice returned a moment later.“We have two rocket pods with sixteenHE Anvil-IIs each.” “I want you to assemble a team and go EVA. Remove those warheads from the wing pods.” “I’m on it,”Sam said. Halsey tried to push her glasses up higher on her nose—instead she bumped up against the faceplate ofher suit’s helmet. “May I ask what you have in mind, Squad Leader?” John left his COM channel open so the Spartans would hear his reply. “Requesting permission to attack the Covenant ship, ma’am.” Her blue eyes widened. “Most certainly not,” she said. “If a warship like theCommonwealth couldn’tdestroy it, a Pelican is certainly no match for them.” “Not the Pelican, no,” John agreed. “But I believe we Spartans are. If we getinside the enemy ship, wecan destroy her.” Doctor Halsey considered, tapping her lower lip. “How will you get onboard?” “We go EVA and use thruster packs to intercept the Covenant ship as it passes en route totheCommonwealth .” She shook her head. “One slight error in your trajectory, and you could miss by kilometers,” Dr. Halseyremarked. A pause. “I don’t miss, ma’am,” John said. “They have reflective shields.” “True,” John replied. “But the ship is damaged. They may have had to lower or reduce shielding in orderto conserve power—and if we have to, we can use one of our own warheads to punch a small hole in thebarrier.” He paused, then added, “There’s also a large hole in their hull. Their shield may not cover thatspace entirely.” Dr. Halsey whispered, “It’s a tremendous risk.” “With respect, ma’am, it’s a bigger risk to sit here and do nothing. After they finish withtheCommonwealth . . . they’ll come for us and we’ll have to fight them anyway. Better to strike first.” She stared off into space, lost in thought. Finally she sighed in resignation. “Very well. Go.” She transferred the pilot controls to her station. “Andblow the hell out of them.” John climbed into the aft compartment. His Spartans stood at attention. He felt a rush of pride; they were ready to follow him as he leapedliterally into the jaws of death. “I’ve got the warheads,” Sam said. It was hard to mistake Sam even with his reflective blast shieldcovering his face. He was the largest Spartan—even more imposing encased in the armor. “Everyone’s got one.” Sam continued as he handed John a metal shell. “Timers and detonators arealready rigged. Stuck on a patch of adhesive polymer; they’ll cling to your suit.” “Spartans,” John said, “grab thruster packs and make ready to go EVA. Everyone else—” He motionedto the three technicians. “—get into the forward cabin. If we fail, they’ll be coming after the Pelican. Protect Dr. Halsey.” He moved aft. Kelly handed him a thruster pack and he slipped it on. “Covenant ship approaching,” Halsey called out. “I’m pumping out your atmosphere to avoid explosivedecompression when I drop the back hatch.” “We’ll only get one shot at this,” John said to the other Spartans. “Plot an intercept trajectory and fireyour thrusters at max burn. If the target changes course, you’ll have to make a best guess correction onthe fly. If you make it, we’ll regroup outside the hole in their hull. If you miss—we’ll pick you up afterwe’re done.” He hesitated, then added, “And if we don’t succeed, then power down your systems and wait for UNSCreinforcements to retrieve you. Live to fight another day. Don’t waste your lives.” There was a moment of silence. “If anyone has a better plan, speak up now.” Sam patted John on the back. “This is a great plan. It’ll be easier than Chief Mendez’s playground. Abunch of little kids could pull it off.” “Sure,” John said. “Everyone ready?” “Sir,” they said. “We’re ready, sir!” John flipped the safety off and then punched in the code to open the Pelican’s tail. The mechanismopened soundlessly in the vacuum. Outside was infinite blackness. He had a feeling of falling throughspace—but the vertigo quickly passed. He positioned himself on the edge of the ramp, both hands gripping a safety handle overhead. The Covenant ship was a tiny dot in the center of his helmet’s view screen. He plotted a course and firedthe thruster pack on maximum burn. Acceleration slammed him into the thruster harness. He knew the others would launch right after him,but he couldn’t turn to see them. It occurred to him then that the Covenant ship might identify the Spartans as incoming missiles—andtheir point-defense lasers were too damn accurate. John clicked on the COM channel. “Doctor, we could use a few decoys if Captain Wallace can sparethem.” “Understood,”she said. The Covenant vessel grew rapidly in his display. A burst from its engines and it turned slightly. Traveling at one hundred million kilometers an hour, even a minor course correction meant that he couldmiss by tens of thousands of kilometers. John carefully corrected his vector. The pulse laser on the side of the Covenant ship glowed, built up energy, until they were dazzling neonblue, then discharged—but not at him. John saw explosions in his peripheral vision. TheCommonwealth had fired a salvo of her Archermissiles. Around him in the dark were puffballs of red-orange detonations—utterly silent. John’s velocity now almost matched that of the ship. He eased toward the hull—twenty meters, ten,five . . . and then the Covenant ship started to pull away from him. It was traveling too fast. He tapped his attitude thrusters and pointed himself perpendicular to the hull. The Covenant hull accelerated under him . . . but he was dropping closer. He stretched out his arms. The hull raced past his fingertips a meter away. John’s fingers brushed against something—it felt semiliquid. He could see his hand skimming a nearinvisible,glassy, shimmering surface: the energy shield. Damn. Their shields were still up. He glanced to either side. The huge hole in their hull was nowhere insight. He slid over the hull, unable to grab hold of it. No.He refused to accept that he had made it this far, only to fail now. A pulse laser flashed a hundred meters away; his faceplate barely adjusted in time. The flash nearlyblinded him. John blinked and then saw a silvery film rush back around the bulbous base of the laserturret. The shield dropped to let the laser fire? The laser started to build up charge again. He would have to act quickly. His timing had to be perfect. If he hit that turret before it fired, he’dbounce off. If he hit the turretas it fired . . . there wouldn’t be much left of him. The turret glowed, intensely bright. John set his thrust harness on a maximum burn toward the laser,noting the rapidly dwindling fuel charge. He closed his eyes, saw the blinding flash through his lids, feltthe heat on his face, then opened his eyes—just in time to crash and bounce into the hull. The hull plates were smooth, but had grooves and odd, organic crenellations—perfect fingerholds. Thedifference between his momentum and the ship’s nearly pulled his arms out of their sockets. He grittedhis teeth and tightened his grip. He had made it. John pulled himself along the hull toward the hole theCommonwealth ’s MAC round had punched in theship. Only two other Spartans waited for him there. “What took you so long?” Sam’s voice crackled over the COM channel. The other Spartan lifted herhelmet’s reflective blast shield. He saw Kelly’s face. “I think we’re it,” Kelly said. “I’m not getting any other responses over the COM channels.” That meant either the Covenant ship shielded their transmissions . . . or there were no Spartans left tocommunicate with. John pushed that last thought aside. The hole was ten meters across. Jagged metal teeth pointed inward. John looked over the edge and sawthat the MAC heavy round had indeed passed all the way through. He saw tiers of exposed decks,severed conduits, and sheared metal beams—and through the other side, black space and stars. They climbed down. John immediately fell down on the first deck. “Gravity,” he said. “And with nothing spinning on this ship.” “Artificial gravity?” Kelly asked. “Dr. Halsey would love to see this.” They continued inward, scaling the metal walls, past alternating layers of gravity and free fall, until theywere approximately in the middle of the ship. John paused and saw the stars wheel outside either end of the hole. The Covenant ship must be turning. They were engaging theCommonwealth . “We better hurry.” He stepped onto an exposed deck, and the gravity settled his stomach—giving him an up-and-downorientation. “Weapons check,” John told them. They examined their assault rifles. The guns had made the journey intact. John slipped in a clip of armorpiercingrounds, noting with pleasure that the suit immediately aligned the sight profile of the gun withhis targeting system. He slung the weapon and checked the HE warhead attached to his hip. The timer and detonator lookedundamaged. John faced a sealed set of sliding pressure doors. It was smooth and soft to his touch. It could have beenmade of metal or plastic . . . or could have been alive, for all he knew. He and Sam grabbed either side and pulled, strained, and then the mechanism gave and the doorsreleased. There was a hiss of atmosphere, a dark hallway beyond. They entered in formation—coveringeach other’s blind spots. The ceiling was three meters high. It made John feel small. “You think they need all this space because they’re so large?” Kelly asked. “We’ll know soon,” he told her. They crouched, weapons at the ready, and moved slowly down the corridor, John and Kelly in front. They rounded a corner and stopped at another set of pressure doors. John grabbed the seam. “Hang on,” Kelly said. She knelt next to a pad with nine buttons. Each button was inscribed with runicalien script. “These characters are strange, but one of them has to open this.” She touched one and it lit,then she keyed another. Gas hissed into the corridor. “At least the pressure is equalized,” she said. John double-checked sensors. Nothing . . . though the alien metal inside the ship could be blocking thescans. “Try another,” Sam said. She did—and the doors slid apart. The room was inhabited. An alien creature stood a meter and half tall, a biped. Its knobby, scaled skin was a sickly, mottledyellow; purple and yellow fins ran along the crest of its skull and its forearms. Glittering, bulbous eyesprotruded from skull-like hollows in the alien’s elongated head. The Master Chief had read the UNSC’s first contact scenarios—they called for cautious attempts atcommunication. He couldn’t imagine communicating with something like this . . . thing. It remindedhim of the carrion birds on Reach—vicious and unclean. The creature stood there, frozen for a moment—staring at the human interlopers. Then it screeched andreached for something on its belt, its movements darting and birdlike. The Spartans shouldered their weapons and fired a trio of bursts with pinpoint accuracy. Armor-piercing rounds tore into the creature, shredding its chest and head. It crumpled into a heapwithout a sound, dead before it hit the deck. Thick blood oozed from the corpse. “That was easy,” Samremarked. He nudged the creature with his boot. “They sure aren’t as tough as their ships.” “Let’s hope it stays that way,” John replied. “I’m getting a radiation reading this way,” Kelly said. She gestured deeper into the vessel. They continued down the corridor and took a side branch. Kelly dropped a NAV marker, and its doubleblue triangle pulsed once on their heads-up displays. They stopped at another set of pressure doors. Sam and John took up flanking positions to cover her. Kelly punched the same buttons she had punched before and the doors slid apart. Another of the creatures was there. It stood in a circular room with crystalline control panels and a largewindow. This time, however, the vulture-headed creature didn’t scream or look particularly surprised. This one looked angry. The creature held a clawlike device in its hand—leveled at John. John and Kelly fired. Bullets filled the air and pinged off a silver shimmering barrier in front of thecreature. A bolt of blue heat blasted from the claw. The blast was similar to the plasma that had hittheCommonwealth . . . and boiled a third of it away. Sam dove forward and knocked John out of the blast’s path; the energy burst caught Sam in the side. The reflective coating of his MJOLNIR armor flared. He fell clutching his side, but still managed to firehis weapon. John and Kelly rolled on their backs and sprayed gunfire at the creature. Bullets peppered the alien—each one bounced and ricocheted off the energy shield. John glanced at his ammo counter—half gone. “Keep firing,” he ordered. The alien kept up a stream of answering fire—energy blasts hammered into Sam, who fell to the deck,his weapon empty. John charged forward and slammed his foot into the alien’s shield and knocked it out of line. He jammedthe barrel of his rifle into the alien’s screeching mouth and squeezed the trigger. The armor-piercing rounds punctured the alien and spattered the back wall with blood and bits of bone. John rose and helped Sam up. “I’m okay,” Sam said, holding his side and grimacing. “Just a little singed.” The reflective coating on hisarmor was blackened. “You sure?” Sam waved him away. John paused over the remaining bits of the alien. He spotted a glint of metal, an armguard, and he pickedit up. He tapped one of three buttons on the device, but nothing happened. He strapped in onto hisforearm. Dr. Halsey might find it useful. They entered the room. The large window was a half-meter thick. It overlooked a large chamber thatdescended three decks. A cylinder ran the length of the chamber and red light pulsed along its length,like a liquid sloshing back and forth. Under the window, on their side, rested a smooth angled surface—perhaps a control panel? On itssurface were tiny symbols: glowing green dots, bars, and squares. “That’s got to be the source of the radiation,” Kelly said, and pointed to the chamber beyond. “Theirreactor . . . or maybe a weapons system.” Another alien marched near the cylinder. It spotted John. A silver shimmer appeared around it. Itscreeched and wobbled in alarm, then scrambled for cover. “Trouble,” John said. “I’ve got an idea.” Sam limped forward. “Hand me those warheads.” John did as he asked, so did Kelly. “We shoot out that window, set the timers on the warheads, and toss them down there. That should startthe party.” “Let’s do it before they call in reinforcements,” John said. They turned and fired at the crystal. It crackled, splintered, then shattered. “Toss those warheads,” Sam said, “and let’s get out of here.” John set the timers. “Three minutes,” he said. “That’ll give us just enough time to get topside and getaway.” He turned to Sam. “You’ll have to stay and hold them off. That’s an order.” “What are you talking about?” Kelly said. “Sam knows.” Sam nodded. “I think I can hold them off that long.” He looked at John and then Kelly. He turned andshowed them the burn in the side of his suit. There was a hole the size of his fist, and beneath that, theskin was blackened and cracked. He smiled, but his teeth were gritted in pain. “That’s nothing,” Kelly said. “We’ll get you patched up in no time. Once we get back—” Her mouthslowly dropped open. “Exactly,” Sam whispered. “Getting back is going to be a problem for me.” “The hole.” John reached out to touch it. “We don’t have any way to seal it.” Kelly shook her head. “If I step off this boat, I’m dead from the decompression,” Sam said, and shrugged. “No,” Kelly growled. “No—everyone gets out alive. We don’t leave teammates behind.” “He has his orders,” John told Kelly. “You’ve got to leave me,” Sam said softly to Kelly. “And don’t tell me you’ll give me your suit. It tookthose techs on Damascus fifteen minutes to fit us. I wouldn’t even know where to start to unzip thisthing.” John looked to the deck. The Chief had told him he’d have to send men to their deaths. He didn’t tellhim it would feel like this. “Don’t waste time talking,” Sam said. “Our new friends aren’t going to wait for us while we figure thisout.” He started the timers. “There. It’s decided.” A three-minute countdown appeared in the corner oftheir heads-up displays. “Now—get going, you two.” John clasped Sam’s hand and squeezed it. Kelly hesitated, then saluted. John turned and grabbed her arm. “Come on, Spartan. Don’t look back.” The truth was, it was John who didn’t dare look back. If he had, he would have stayed with Sam. Betterto die with a friend than leave him behind. But as much as he wanted to fight and die alongside hisfriend, he had to set an example for the rest of the Spartans—and live to fight another day. John and Kelly pushed the pressure doors shut behind them. “Good-bye,” he whispered. The countdown timer ticked the seconds off inexorably. 2:35 . . . They ran down the corridor, popped the seal on the outer door—the atmosphere vented. 1:05 . . . They climbed up through the twisted metal canyon that the MAC round had torn through the hull. 0:33 . . . “There,” John said, and pointed to the base of a charged pulse laser. They crawled toward it, waited asthe glow built to a lethal charge. 0:12 . . . They crouched and held onto one another. The laser fired. The heat blistered John’s back. They pushed off with all their strength, multiplied through theMJOLNIR armor. 0:00. The shield parted and they cleared the ship, hurtling into the blackness. The Covenant ship shuddered. Flashes of red appeared inside the hole—then a gout of fire rose andballooned, but curled downward as it hit and rebounded off their own shield. The plasma spread alongthe length of their vessel. The shield shimmered and rippled silver—holding the destructive force inside. Metal glowed and melted. The pulse laser turrets absorbed into the hull. The hull blistered, bubbled, andboiled. The shield finally gave—the ship exploded. Kelly clung to John. A thousand molten fragments hurled past them, cooling from white to orange to red and thendisappearing into the dark of the night. Sam’s death had shown them that the Covenant were not invincible. They could be beaten. At a highcost, however. John finally understood what the Chief had meant—the difference between a life wasted and a life spent. John also knew that humanity had a fighting chance . . . and he was ready to go to war. SECTION III SIGMA OCTANUS Chapter 15 0000 Hours, July 17, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSC Remote Scanning OutpostArchimedes , on the edge of the Sigma Octanus Star SystemEnsign William Lovell scratched his head, yawned, and sat down at his duty station. The wraparoundview screen warmed to his presence. “Good morning, Ensign Lovell,” the computer said. “Morning, sexy,” he said. It had been months since the Ensign had seen a real woman—the cold femalevoice of the computer was the closest thing he was getting to a date. “Voiceprint match,” the computer confirmed. “Please enter password.” He typed: ThereOncewasAgirlThe Ensign had never taken his duty too seriously. Maybe that’s why he only made it through his secondyear at the Academy. And maybe that’s why he had been onArchimedes station for the last year, stuckwith third shift. But that suited him fine. “Please reenter password.” He typed more carefully this time:ThereOnceWasAGirl . After first contact with the Covenant, he had almost been conscripted straight out of school; instead, hehad actually volunteered. Admiral Cole had defeated the Covenant at Harvest in 2531. His victory was publicized on every vidand holo throughout the Inner and Outer Colonies and all the way to Earth. That’s why Lovell didn’t try to dodge the enlistment officers. He had thought he’d watch a few battlesfrom the bridge of a destroyer, fire a few missiles, rack up the victories, and be promoted to Captainwithin a year. His excellent grades gave him instant admission to OCS on Luna. There was one small detail, however, the UNSC propaganda machine had left out of their broadcasts: Cole had won only because he outnumbered the Covenant three to one . . . and even then, he had losttwo-thirds of his fleet. Ensign Lovell had served on the UNSC frigateGorgon for four years. He had been promoted to FirstLieutenant then busted down to Second Lieutenant and finally to Ensign for insubordination and grossincompetence. The only reason they hadn’t drummed him out of the service was that the USNC neededevery man and woman they could get their hands on. While on theGorgon , he and the rest of Admiral Cole’s fleet had sped among the Outer Colonieschasing, and being chased by, the Covenant. After four years’ space duty, Lovell had seen a dozenworlds glassed . . . and billions murdered. He had simply broken under the strain. He closed his eyes and remembered. No he hadn’t broken; hewas just scared of dying like everyone else. “Please keep your eyes open,” the computer told him. “Processing retinal scan.” He had drifted from office work to low-priority assignments and finally landed here a year ago. By thattime there were no more Outer Colonies. The Covenant had destroyed them all and were pressinginexorably inward, slowly taking the Inner Colonies. There had been a few isolated victories . . . but heknew it was only a matter of time before the aliens wiped the human race out of existence. “Login complete,” the computer announced. Ensign Lovell’s identity record was displayed on the monitor. In his Academy picture, he looked tenyears younger: neatly trimmed jet-black hair, toothy grin, and sparkling green eyes. Today his hair wasunkempt and the spark was long gone from his eyes. “Please read General Order 098831A-1 before proceeding.” The Ensign had memorized this stupid thing. But the computer would track his eye motions—make surehe read it anyway. He opened the file and it popped on-screen: United Nations Space Command Emergency Priority Order 098831A-1Encryption Code:RedPublic Key:file /first light/From:UNSC/NAVCOM Fleet H. T. WardTo:ALL UNSC PERSONNELSubject:General Order 098831A-1 (“The Cole Protocol”)Classification:RESTRICTED (BGX Directive)The Cole ProtocolTo safeguard the Inner Colonies and Earth, all UNSC vessels or stations must not be captured with intactnavigation databases that may lead Covenant forces to human civilian population centers. Ifany Covenant forces are detected: 1. Activate selective purge of databases on all ship-based and planetary data networks. 2. Initiate triple-screen check to ensure all data has been erased and all backups neutralized. 3. Execute viral data scavengers. (Download from UNSCTTP://EPWW:COLEPROTOCOL/Virtualscav/fbr.091)4. If retreating from Covenant forces, all ships must enter Slipstream space with randomized vectorsNOT directed toward Earth, the Inner Colonies, or any other human population center. 5. In case of imminent capture by Covenant forces, all UNSC ships MUST self-destruct. Violation of this directive will be considered an act of TREASON, and pursuant to USNC Military LawArticles JAG 845-P and JAG 7556-L, such violations are punishable by life imprisonment or execution. /end file/PressENTER if you understand these orders. Ensign Lovell pressed ENTER. The UNSC wasn’t taking any chances. And after everything he had seen, he didn’t blame them. His scanning windows appeared on the view screen, full of spectroscopic tracers and radar—and lots ofnoise. Archimedesstation cycled three probes into and out of Slipstream space. Each probe sent out radar pingsand analyzed the spectrum from radio to X rays, then reentered normal space and broadcast the databack to the station. The problem with Slipstream space was that the laws of physics never worked the way they weresupposed to. Exact positions, times, velocities, even masses were impossible to measure with any realaccuracy. Ships never knew exactly where they were, or exactly where there were going. Every time the probes returned from their two-second journey, they could appear exactly where they hadleft . . . or three million kilometers distant. Sometimes they never returned at all. Drones had to be sentafter the probes before the process could be repeated. Because of this slipperiness in the interdimensional space, UNSC ships traveling between star systemsmight arrive half a billion kilometers off course. The curious properties of Slipspace also made this assignment a joke. Ensign Lovell was supposed to watch for pirates or black-market runners trying to sneak by . . . andmost importantly, for the Covenant. This station had never logged so much as a Covenant probesilhouette—and that was the reason he had specifically requested this dead-end assignment. It was safe. What he did see with regularity were trash dumps from UNSC vessels, clouds of primordial atomichydrogen, even the occasional comet that had somehow plowed into the Slipstream. Lovell yawned, kicked his feet up onto the control console, and closed his eyes. He nearly fell out of hischair when the COM board contact alert pinged. “Oh no,” he whispered, fear and shame at his own cowardice forming a cold lump in his belly.Don’t letit be the Covenant. Don’t let it . . . not here. He quickly activated the controls and traced the contact signal back to the source—Alpha probe. The probe had detected an incoming mass, a slight arc to its trajectory pulled by the gravity of SigmaOctanus. It was large. A cloud of dust, perhaps? If it was, it would soon distort and scatter. Ensign Lovell sat up straighter in his chair. Beta probe cycled back. The mass was still there and as solid as before. It was the largest reading EnsignLovell had ever seen: twenty thousand tons. That couldn’t be a Covenant ship—they didn’t get that big. And the silhouette was a bumpy spherical shape; it didn’t match any of the Covenant ships in thedatabase. It had to be a rogue asteroid. He tapped his stylus on the desk. What if it wasn’t an asteroid? He’d have to purge the database andenable the self-destruct mechanism for the outpost. But what could the Covenant want way out here? Gamma probe reappeared. The mass readings were unchanged. Spectroscopic analysis was inconclusive,which was normal for probe reading at this distance. The mass was two hours out at its present velocity. Its projected trajectory was hyperbolic—a quick swing near the star, and then it would pass invisibly outof the system and be forever gone. He noted that its trajectory bought it close to Sigma Octanus IV . . . which, if the rock were in real space,would be cause for alarm. In Slipspace, however, it could pass “through” the planet, and no one wouldnotice. Ensign Lovell relaxed and sent the retrieval drones after the three probes. By the time they got theprobes back, though, the mass would be long gone. He stared at the last image on screen. Was it worth sending an immediate report to Sigma OctanusCOM? They’d make him send his probes out without a proper recovery, and the probes would likely getlost after that. A supply ship would have to be sent out here to replace them. The station would have tobe inspected and recertified—and he’d receive a thorough lecture on what did and did not constitute avalid emergency. No . . . there was no need to bother anyone over this. The only ones who would be really interested werethe high-forehead types at UNSC Astrophysics, and they could review the data at their leisure. He logged the anomaly and attached it to his hourly update. Ensign Lovell kicked up his boots and reclined, once again feeling perfectly safe in his little corner ofthe universe. Chapter 16 0300 Hours, July 17, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSC destroyerIroquois on routine patrol in the Sigma Octanus Star SystemCommander Jacob Keyes stood on the bridge of theIroquois . He leaned against the brass railing andsurveyed the stars in the distance. He wished the circumstances of his first command were moreauspicious, but experienced officers were in short supply these days. And he had his orders. He walked around the circular bridge examining the monitors and displays of engine status. He pausedat the screens showing the stars fore and aft; he couldn’t quite get used to the view of deep space again. The stars were so vivid . . . and here, so different from the stars near Earth. TheIroquois had rolled out of space dock at Reach—one of the UNSC’s primary naval yards—just threemonths ago. They hadn’t even installed her AI yet; like good officers, the elaborate artificially intelligentcomputer systems were also in dangerously short supply. Still,Iroquois was fast, well armored, andarmed to the teeth. He couldn’t ask for a finer vessel. Unlike the frigates that Commander Keyes had toured on before, theMeriwether Lewis andMidsummerNight , this ship was a destroyer. She was almost as heavy as both those vessels combined, but she wasonly seven meters longer. Some in the fleet thought the massive ships were unwieldy in combat—tooslow and cumbersome. What those critics forgot was that a UNSC destroyer sported two MAC guns,twenty-six oversized Archer missile pods, and three nuclear warheads. Unlike other fleet ships, shecarried no single-ship fighters—instead her extra mass came from the nearly two meters of titanium-Abattleplate armor that covered her from stem to stern. TheIroquois could dish out and take a tremendousamount of punishment. Someone at the shipyard had appreciated theIroquois for what she was, too—two long streaks ofcrimson war paint had been applied to her port and starboard flanks. Strictly nonregulation and it wouldhave to go . . . but secretly, Commander Keyes liked the ornamentation. He sat in the Commander’s chair and watched his junior officers at their stations. “Incoming transmissions,” Lieutenant Dominique reported. “Status reports from Sigma Octanus Fourand also theArchimedes Sensor Outpost.” “Pipe them through to my monitor,” Commander Keyes said. Dominique had been one of his students at the Academy—he had transferred to Luna from theUniversité del’ Astrophysique in Paris after his sister was killed in action. He was short, nimbly athletic,and he rarely cracked a smile—he was always business. Keyes appreciated that. Commander Keyes was less impressed, however, with the rest of his bridge officers. Lieutenant Hikowa manned the weapons console. Her long fingers and slender arms slowly checked thestatus of the ordnance with all the deliberation of a sleepwalker. Her dark hair was always falling intoher eyes, too. Oddly, her record showed that she had survived several battles with the Covenant . . . soperhaps her lack of enthusiasm was merely battle fatigue. Lieutenant Hall stood post at ops. She seemed competent enough. Her uniform was always freshlypressed, her blond hair trimmed exactly at the regulation sixteen centimeters. She had authored sevenphysics papers on Slipspace communications. The only problem was that she was always smiling, andtrying to impress him . . . occasionally by showing up her fellow officers. Keyes disapproved of suchdisplays of ambition. Manning navigation, however, was his most problematic officer: Lieutenant Jaggers. It might have beenthat navigation was the Commander’s strong suit, so anyone else in that position never seemed to be upto par. On the other hand, Lieutenant Jaggers was moody, and when Keyes had come aboard, the man’ssmall hazel eyes seemed glazed. He could have sworn he had caught the man on duty with liquor on hisbreath, too. He had ordered a blood test—the results were negative. “Orders, sir?” Jagger asked. “Continue on this heading, Lieutenant. We’ll finish our patrol around Sigma Octanus and then accelerateand enter Slipspace.” “Aye, sir.” Commander Keyes eased into his seat and detached the tiny monitor from the armrest. He read thehourly report from theArchimedes Sensor Outpost. The log of the large mass was curious. It was too bigto be even the largest Covenant carrier . . . yet something was oddly familiar about its shape. He retrieved his pipe from his jacket, lit it, inhaled a puff, and exhaled the fragrant smoke through hisnose. Keyes would never even have thought about smoking on the other vessels he had served on, buthere . . . well, command had its privileges. He pulled up his files transferred from the Academy—several theoretical papers that had recently caughthis interest. One, he thought, might apply to the outpost’s unusual reading. That paper had initially sparked his interest because of its author. He had never forgotten his firstassignment with Dr. Catherine Halsey . . . nor the names of any of the children they had observed. He opened the file and read: United Nations Space Command Astrophysics Journal 034-23-01Date:May 097, 2540 (Military Calendar)Encryption Code:NonePublic Key:NAAuthor(s):Lieutenant Commander Fhajad 034 (service number [CLASSIFIED]), UNSC Office of NavalIntelligenceSubject:Dimensional-Mass Space Compressions in Shaw-Fujikawa (a.k.a. “Slipstream”) Space. Classification:NA/start file/Abstract:The space-bending properties of mass in normal space are well described by Einstein’s generalrelativity. Such distortions however, are complicated by the anomalous quantum gravitational effects inShaw-Fujikawa (SF) spaces. Using loop-string analysis, it can be shown that a large mass bends space inSF space more than general relativity predicts by an order of magnitude. This bending may explain howseveral small objects clustered closely together in SF space have been reported erroneously as a singlelarger mass. PressENTER to continue. Commander Keyes switched back to the silhouette from theArchimedes report. The leading edge almostlooked like the bulbous head of a whale. That realization chilled him to the core. He quickly opened the UNSC database of all known Covenant ships. He scanned them until he foundthe three-dimensional representation of one of their medium-sized warships. He rotated it into threequartersprofile. He overlaid the image on the silhouette, scaled it back a little. It was a perfect match. “Lieutenant Dominique, get FLEETCOM ASAP. Priority Alpha.” The Lieutenant snapped straight in his chair. “Yes, sir!” The bridge officers looked at the Commander then exchanged glances with one another. Commander Keyes brought up a map of the system on his data pad. The silhouette monitored by theoutpost was on a direct course for Sigma Octanus IV. That confirmed his theory. “Bring us about to course zero four seven, Lieutenant Jaggers. Lieutenant Hall, push the reactors to onehundred ten percent.” “Aye, Commander,” Lieutenant Jaggers replied. “Reactor running hot, sir,” Hall reported. “Now exceeding recommended operational parameters.” “ETA?” Jaggers calculated, then looked up. “Forty-three minutes,” he replied. “Too slow,” Commander Keyes muttered. “Reactor to one hundred thirty percent, Lieutenant Hall.” She hesitated. “Sir?” “Do it!” “Yes, sir!” She moved as if someone had electrically shocked her. “FLEETCOM online, sir,” Lieutenant Dominique said. The weathered face of Admiral Michael Stanforth appeared on the main view screen. Commander Keyes breathed a sigh of relief. Admiral Stanforth had a reputation for being reasonableand intelligent. He’d understand the logic of the situation. “Commander Keyes,” the Admiral said. “The old ‘Schoolmaster’ himself, huh? This is the prioritychannel, son. This better be an emergency.” Commander Keyes ignored the obvious condescension. He knew many at FLEETCOM thought hedeserved to command nothing but a classroom—and some probably thought he didn’t deserve that. “The Sigma Octanus System is about to come under attack, sir.” Admiral Stanforth cocked an eyebrow and leaned closer to the screen. “I’m requesting that all ships in-system rendezvous with theIroquois at Sigma Octanus Four. And anyships in neighboring systems make best speed here.” “Show me what you’ve got, Keyes,” the Admiral said. Commander Keyes displayed the silhouette from the sensor outpost first. “Covenant ships, sir. Theirsilhouettes are overlapped. Our probes resolve them as one mass because Slipspace is bent by gravitymore easily than normal space.” The Admiral listened to his analysis, frowning. “You’ve fought the Covenant, sir. You known how precisely they can maneuver their ships through theSlipstream. I’ve seen a dozen alien craft appear in normal space, in perfect formation, not a kilometerapart.” “Yeah,” the Admiral muttered. “I’ve seen that, too. All right, Keyes, good work. You’ll get everythingwe can send.” “Thank you, sir.” “You just hang in there, son. Good luck. FLEETCOM out.” The view screen snapped off. “Sir?” Lieutenant Hall turned around. “How many Covenant ships?” “I’d estimate four medium-tonnage vessels,” he said. “The equivalent of our frigates.” “FourCovenant ships?” Lieutenant Jaggers muttered. “What canwe do?” “Do?” Commander Keyes said. “Our duty.” “Begging the Commander’s pardon, but there arefour Cov—” Jaggers began to protest. Keyes cut him off with a glare. “Stow that, mister.” He paused, weighing his words. “Sigma OctanusFour has seventeen million citizens, Lieutenant. Are you suggesting that we just stand by and watch theCovenant glass the planet?” “No, sir.” His gaze dropped to the deck. “We will do the best we can,” Commander Keyes said. “In the meantime, remove all weapons systemlocks, order missile crews to readiness, warm up the MAC guns, and remove the safeties from one of ournukes.” “Yes, sir!” Lieutenant Hikowa said. An alarm sounded at ops. “Reactor hysteresis approaching failure levels,” Lieutenant Hall reported. “Superconducting magnets overloading. Coolant breakdown imminent.” “Vent primary coolant and pump in the reserve tanks,” Commander Keyes ordered. “That will buy usanother five minutes.” “Yes, sir.” Commander Keyes fumbled with his pipe. He didn’t bother to light the thing, just chewed on the end. Then he put it away. The nervous habit wasn’t setting the right example for his bridge officers. He didn’thave the luxury of showing his apprehension. The truth was, he was terrified. Four Covenant ships would be an even match forseven destroyers. Thebest he could hope for was to get their attention and outrun them—hopefully distract them until the fleetgot here. Of course . . . those Covenant ships could outrun theIroquois as well. “Lieutenant Jaggers,” he said, “initiate the Cole Protocol. Purge our navigation databases, and thengenerate an appropriate randomized exit vector from the Sigma Octanus System.” “Yes, sir.” He fumbled with his controls. He hung his head, steadied his hands, and slowly typed in thecommands. “Lieutenant Hall: make preparations to override reactor safeties.” His junior officers all paused for a second. “Aye, sir,” Lieutenant Hall whispered. “We’re receiving a transmission from the system’s edge,” Lieutenant Dominique announced. “FrigatesAlliance andGettysburg are on an inbound vector at maximum speed. ETA . . . one hour.” “Good,” Commander Keyes said. That hour might as well be a month. This battle would be over in minutes. He could not fight the enemy—he was severely outgunned. He couldn’t outrun them, either. There hadto be another option. Hadn’t he always told his students that when you were out of options, then you were using the wrongtactics? You had to bend the rules. Shift perspective—anything to find a way out of a hopeless situation. The black space near Sigma Octanus IV boiled and frothed with motes of green light. “Ships entering normal space,” Lieutenant Jaggers announced, panic tingeing his voice. Commander Keyes got to his feet. He had been wrong. There weren’t four Covenant frigates. A pair of enemy frigates emerged fromSlipspace . . . escorting a destroyer and a carrier. His blood ran cold. He had seen battles in which a Covenant destroyer had made Swiss cheese of UNSCships. Its plasma torpedoes could boil through theIroquois ’ two meters of titanium-A battleplate inseconds. Their weapons were light-years ahead of the UNSC’s. “Their weapons,” Commander Keyes muttered under his breath. Yes . . . hedid have a third option. “Continue at emergency speed,” he ordered, “and come about to heading zero three two.” Lieutenant Jaggers swiveled in his seat. “That will put us on collision course with their destroyer, sir.” “I know,” Commander Keyes replied. “In fact, I’m counting on doing just that.” Chapter 17 0320 Hours, July 17, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSCIroquois en route to Sigma Octanus IVCommander Keyes stood with his hands behind his back and tried to look calm. Not an easy thing to dowhen his ship was on a collision course with a Covenant battlegroup. Inside, adrenaline raced throughhis blood and his pulse pounded. He had to at leastappear in control for his crew. He was asking a lot from them . . . probablyeverything ,in fact. His junior officers watched their status monitors; they occasionally glanced nervously at him, but theirgazes always drifted back to the center view screen. The Covenant ships looked like toys in the distance. It was dangerous to think of them as harmless,however. One slip, one underestimation of their tremendous firepower, and theIroquois would bedestroyed. The alien carrier had three bulbous sections; its swollen center had thirteen launch bays. CommanderKeyes had seen hundreds of fighters stream out of them before—fast, accurate, and deadly craft. Normally his ship’s AI would handle point defense . . . only this time, there was no AI installed ontheIroquois . The alien destroyer was a third again as massive as theIroquois . She bristled with pulse laser turrets,insectlike antennae, and chitinous pods. The carrier and destroyer moved together . . . but nottowardIroquois . They slowly drifted in-system toward Sigma Octanus IV. Were they going to ignore him? Glass the planet without even bothering to swat him out of the way first? The Covenant frigates, however, lagged behind. They turned in unison and their sides faced theIroquois—preparing for a broadside. Motes of red light appeared and swarmed toward the frigate’s lateral lines,building into a solid stripe of hellish illumination. “Detecting high levels of beta particle radiation,” Lieutenant Dominique said. “They’re getting ready tofire their plasma weapons, Commander.” “Course correction, sir?” Lieutenant Jaggers asked. His fingers tapped in a new heading bound outsystem. “Stay on course.” It took all Commander Keyes’ concentration to say that matter-of-factly. Lieutenant Jaggers turned and started to speak—but Commander Keyes didn’t have time to address hisconcerns. “Lieutenant Hikowa,” Commander Keyes said. “Arm a Shiva missile. Remove all nuclear launch safetylocks.” “Shiva armed. Aye, Commander.” Lieutenant Hikowa’s face was a mask of grim determination. “Set the fuse on radio transmission code sequence detonation only. Disable proximity fuse. Stand by fora launch pilot program.” “Sir?” Lieutenant Hikowa looked confused by his order, but then said, “Sir! Yes, sir. Making it happen.” The alien frigates in the center of the view screen no longer looked remotely like toys to CommanderKeyes. They looked real and larger every second. The red glow along their sides had become solidbands . . . almost too bright to look directly at. Commander Keyes picked up his data pad and quickly tapped in calculations: velocity, mass, andheading. He wished they had an AI online to double-check his figures. This amounted to no more thanan educated guess. How long would it take theIroquois to orbit Sigma Octanus IV? He got a number andcut it by 60 percent, knowing they’d either pick up speed . . . or be dead by the time it mattered. “Lieutenant Hikowa, set the Shiva’s course for mark one eight zero. Full burn for twelve seconds.” “Aye, sir,” she said, tapped in the parameters, and locked them into the system. “Missile ready, sir.” “Sir!” Lieutenant Jaggers swiveled around and stood. His lips were drawn into a tight thin line. “Thatcourse fires the missile directlyaway from our enemies.” “I am aware of that, Lieutenant Jaggers. Sit down and await further orders.” Lieutenant Jaggers sat. He rubbed his temple with a trembling hand. His other hand balled into a fist. Commander Keyes linked to the NAV system and set a countdown timer on his data pad. Twenty-nineseconds. “On my mark, Lieutenant Hikowa, launch that nuke . . . and not a moment before.” “Aye, sir.” Her slender hand hovered over the control panel. “MAC guns are still hot, Commander,” shereminded him. “Divert the energy keeping the capacitors at full charge and route them to the engines,” CommanderKeyes ordered. Lieutenant Hall said, “Diverting now, sir.” She exchanged a glance with Lieutenant Hikowa. “Enginesnow operating at one hundred fifty percent of rated output. Red line in two minutes.” “Contact! Contact!” Lieutenant Dominique shouted. “Enemy plasma torpedoes away, sir!” Scarlet lightning erupted from the alien frigates—twin bolts of fire streaked through the darkness. Theylooked as if they could burn space itself. The torpedoes were on a direct course for theIroquois . “Course correction, sir?” Lieutenant Jaggers’ voice broke with strain. His uniform was soaked withperspiration. “Negative,” Commander Keyes replied. “Continue on this heading. Arm all aft Archer missile pods. Rotate launch arcs one eight zero degrees.” “Aye, sir.” Lieutenant Hikowa wrinkled her brow, and then she slowly nodded and silently mouthed,“ . . . yes.” Boiling red plasma filled half the forward view screen. It was beautiful to watch in an odd way—like afront-row seat at a forest fire. Keyes found himself strangely calm. This would either work or it would not. The odds were long, but hewas confident that his actions were the only option to survive this encounter. Lieutenant Dominique turned. “Collision with plasma in nineteen seconds, sir.” Jaggers turned from his station. “Sir! This is suicide! Our armor can’t withstand—” Keyes cut him off. “Mister, man your station or I will have you removed from the bridge.” Jaggers looked pleadingly at Hikowa. “We’re going todie , Aki—” She refused to meet his gaze and turned back to her controls. “You heard the Commander,” she saidquietly. “Man your post.” Jaggers sank into his seat. “Collision with plasma in seven seconds,” Lieutenant Hall said. She bit her lower lip. “Lieutenant Jaggers, transfer emergency thruster controls to my station.” “Yes . . . yes, sir.” The emergency thrusters were tanks of trihydride tetrazine and hydrogen peroxide. When they mixed,they did so with explosive force—literally blasting theIroquois onto a new course. The ship had six suchtanks strategically placed on hardened points on the hull. Commander Keyes consulted the countdown timer on his data pad. “Lieutenant Hikowa: fire the nuke.” “Shiva away, sir! On course—one eight zero, maximum burn.” Plasma filled the forescreen; the center of the red mass turned blue. Greens and yellows radiatedoutward, the light frequencies blue-shifting in spectra. “Distance three hundred thousand kilometers,” Lieutenant Dominique said. “Collision in two seconds.” Commander Keyes waited a heartbeat then hit the emergency thrusters to port. A bang resonatedthrough the ship’s hull—Commander Keyes flew sideways and impacted with the bulkhead. The view screen was full of fire and the bridge was suddenly hot. Commander Keyes stood. He counted the beats of his pounding heart. One, two, three—If they had been hit by the plasma, there wouldn’t be anything to count. They would be dead already. Only one view screen was working now, however. “Aft camera,” he said. The twin blots of fire streaked along their trajectories for a moment, then lazily arced, continuing theirpursuit of theIroquois . One pulled slightly ahead of its counterpart, so they appeared now like twoblazing eyes. Commander Keyes marveled at the aliens’ ability to direct that plasma from such a great distance. “Good,” he murmured to himself. “Chase us all the way to hell, you bastards. “Track them,” he ordered Lieutenant Hall. “Aye, sir,” she said. Her perfectly groomed hair was tousled. “Plasma increasing velocity. Matching ourspeed . . . overtaking our velocity now. They will intercept in forty-three seconds.” “Forward camera,” Commander Keyes ordered. The view screen flashed: the image changed to show the two alien frigates turning to face theincomingIroquois head-on. Blue lights flickered along their hulls—pulse lasers charging. Commander Keyes pulled back the camera angle and saw the alien carrier and the destroyer were stillinbound toward Sigma Octanus IV. He read their position off his data pad and quickly performed thenecessary calculations. “Course correction,” he told Lieutenant Jaggers. “Come about to heading zero zero four point two five. Declination zero zero zero point one eight.” “Aye, sir,” Jaggers said. “Zero zero four point two five. Declination zero zero zero point one eight.” The view screen turned and centered on the enormous Covenant destroyer. “Collision course!” Lieutenant Hall announced. “Impact with Covenant destroyer in eight seconds.” “Stand by for new course correction: declination minus zero zero zero point one zero.” “Aye, sir.” As Jaggers typed he wiped the sweat from his eyes and double-checked his numbers. “Course online. Awaiting your order, sir.” “Collision with Covenant destroyer in five seconds,” Hall said. She clutched the edge of her seat. The destroyer grew in the view screen: laser turrets and launch bays, bulbous alien protrusions andflickering blue lights. “Hold this course,” Commander Keyes said. “Sound collision alarm. Switch to undercarriage cameranow.” Klaxons blared. The view screen snapped off and on and showed black space—then a flash of the faint purple-blue hullof a Covenant ship. TheIroquois screeched and shuddered as she grazed the prow of the Covenant destroyer. Silver shieldsflickered onscreen—then the screen filled with static. “Course correction now!” Commander Keyes shouted. “Aye, sir.” There was a brief burn from the thrusters and theIroquois nudged down slightly. “Hull breach!” Lieutenant Hall said. “Sealing pressure doors.” “Aft camera,” Commander Keyes said. “Guns: Fire aft Archer missile pods!” “Missiles away,” Lieutenant Hikowa replied. Keyes watched as the first of the plasma torpedoes that had been trailing theIroquois impacted on theprow of the alien destroyer. The ship’s shields flared, flickered . . . and vanished. The second bolt hit amoment later. The hull of the alien ship blazed and then turned red-hot, melted, and boiled. Secondaryexplosions burst through the hull. The Archer missiles streaked toward the wounded Covenant ship, tiny trails of exhaust stretching fromtheIroquois to the target. They slammed into the gaping wounds in the hull and detonated. Fire anddebris burst from the destroyer. A smile spread across Keyes’ face as he watched the alien ship burn, list, and slowly plunge into SigmaOctanus IV’s gravity well. Without power, the Covenant vessel would burn up in the planet’satmosphere. Commander Keyes flicked on the intercom. “Brace for emergency thruster maneuver.” He punched the thruster controls—explosive force detonated on the starboard side of the ship. TheIroquois nosed toward Sigma Octanus IV. “Course correction, Lieutenant Jaggers,” he said. “Bring us into a tight orbit.” “Aye, sir.” He furiously tapped in commands, diverting engine output through attitude thrusters. The hull of theIroquois glowed red as it entered the atmosphere. A cloud of yellow ionization built uparound the view screen. Commander Keyes gripped the railing tighter. The view screen cleared and he could see the stars. TheIroquois entered the dark side of the planet. Commander Keyes slumped forward and started breathing again. “Engine coolant failure, sir,” Lieutenant Hall said. “Shut the engines down,” he ordered. “Emergency vent.” “Aye, sir. Venting fusion reactor plasma.” TheIroquois was abruptly quiet. No rumble of her engines. And no one said anything until LieutenantHikowa stood and said, “Sir, that was the most brilliant maneuver I have ever seen.” Commander Keyes gave a short laugh. “You think so, Lieutenant?” If one of his students had proposed such a maneuver in his tactics class, he would have given them a C+. He would have told them their maneuver was full of bravado and daring . . . but extremely risky, placingthe crew in the ship in unnecessary danger. “This isn’t over yet. Stay sharp,” he told them. “Lieutenant Hikowa what is the charge status of theMAC guns?” “Capacitors at ninety-five percent, sir, and draining at a rate of three percent per minute.” “Ready MAC guns, one heavy round apiece. Arm all forward Archer missile pods.” “Aye, sir.” TheIroquois broke free of the dark side of Sigma Octanus IV. “Fire chemical thrusters to break orbit, Lieutenant Hall.” “Firing, aye.” There was a brief rumble. The screen centered on the backsides of the two Covenant frigates they hadpassed on the way in. The alien ships started to come about; blue flashes flickered along their hulls as their laser turretscharged. Motes of red collected along their lateral lines. They were readying another salvo of plasmatorpedoes. There was something there, however, that was too small to see on the view screen: the nuke. Keyes hadlaunched that missile in the opposite direction—but its reverse thrust had not completely overcome theirtremendous forward velocity. As theIroquois had screamed over the prow of the destroyer, and as they orbited Sigma Octanus IV, thenuke had drifted closer to the frigates . . . who had fixed their attention solidly on theIroquois . Commander Keyes tapped his data pad and sent the signal to detonate the bomb. There was a flash of white, a crackle of lightning, and the alien ships vanished as a cloud of destructionenveloped them. Waves of the EMP interacted with the magnetic field of Sigma Octanus IV—rippledwith rainbow borealis. The cloud of vapor expanded and cooled, and faded to yellow, orange, red, thenblack dust that scattered into space. Both Covenant frigates, however, were still intact. Their shields, however, flickered once . . . then wentdead. “Get me firing solutions for the MAC guns, Lieutenant Hikowa. On the double.” “Aye, sir. MAC gun capacitors at ninety-three percent. Firing solution online.” “Fire, Lieutenant Hikowa.” Two thumps resonated through the hull of theIroquois . “Lock remaining Archer missile pods on targets and fire.” “Missiles away, Commander.” Twin thunderbolts and hundreds of missiles streaked toward the two helpless frigates. The MAC rounds tore though them—one ship was holed from nose to tail; the other ship was hit on hermidline, right near the engines. Internal explosions chained up the length of the ship, bulging the secondship’s hull along her length. Archer missiles impacted seconds later, exploding through chunks of hull and armor, tearing the alienships apart. The frigate that had taken the MAC round in her engines mushroomed, a fireworks bouquetof shrapnel and sparks. The other ship burned, her internal skeletal structure showing now; she turnedtoward theIroquois but didn’t fire a weapon . . . just drifted out of control. Dead in space. “Position of the Covenant carrier, Lieutenant Hall?” Lieutenant Hall paused, then reported, “In polar orbit around Sigma Octanus Four. But she’s moving offat considerable speed. Headed out-system, course zero four five.” “Alert theAllegiance andGettysburg of her position.” Commander Keyes sighed and slumped back into his chair. They had stopped the Covenant ships fromglassing the planet—saved millions of lives. They had done the impossible: taken on four Covenantships and won. Commander Keyes paused in his self-congratulation. Something was wrong. He had never seen theCovenant run. In every battle he had seen or read about, they stayed to slaughter every last survivor . . . or if they were defeated, they always fought to the last ship. “Check the planet,” he told Lieutenant Hall. “Look for anything—dropped weapons, strangetransmissions. There’s got to be something there.” “Aye, sir.” Keyes prayed she wouldn’t find anything. At this point he was out of tricks. He couldn’t turntheIroquois around and return to Sigma Octanus IV even if he had wanted to. TheIroquois ’ engineswere down for a long time. They were speeding on an out-system vector at a considerable velocity. Andeven if they could stop—there was no way to recharge the MAC guns, and no remaining Archermissiles. They were practically dead in space. He pulled out his pipe and steadied his shaking hand. “Sir!” Lieutenant Hall cried. “Dropships, sir. The alien carrier deployed thirty—correction: thirty-four—dropships. I have silhouettes descending to the surface. They’re on course for C.te d’Azur. A majorpopulation center.” “An invasion,” Commander Keyes said. “Get FLEETCOM ASAP. Time to send in the Marines.” Chapter 18 0600 Hours, July 18, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSCIroquois , military staging area in orbit around Sigma Octanus IVCommander Keyes had a sinking feeling that although he had won the battle, it would be the first ofmany to come in the Sigma Octanus System. He watched the four dozen other UNSC ships orbit the planet: frigates and destroyers, two carriers, anda massive repair and refitting station—more vessels than Admiral Cole had at his disposal during hisfour-year-long campaign to save Harvest. Admiral Stanforth had pulled out all the stops. Although Commander Keyes was grateful for the quick and overwhelming response, he wondered whythe Admiral had dedicated so many ships to the area. Sigma Octanus wasn’t strategically positioned. Ithad no special resources. True, the UNSC had standing orders to protect civilian lives, but the fleet wasspread dangerously thin. Commander Keyes knew there were more valuable systems that neededprotection. He pushed these thoughts aside. He was sure Admiral Stanforth had his reasons. Meanwhile the repairand resupply of theIroquois was his top priority—he didn’t want to get caught half ready if the Covenantreturned. Or rather,when they returned. It was a curious thing: the aliens dropping their ground forces and then retreating. That was not theirusual mode of operation. Commander Keyes suspected this was just an opening move in a game hedidn’t yet understand. A shadow crossed the fore camera of theIroquois as the repair stationCradle maneuvered closer.Cradlewas essentially a large square plate with engines. Large was an understatement; she was over a squarekilometer. Three destroyers could be eclipsed by her shadow. The station running at full steam couldrefit six destroyers, three from her lower surface and three on her upper surface, within a matter of hours. Scaffolds deployed from her surfaces to facilitate repairs. Resupply tubes, hoses, and cargo trams fedinto theIroquois . It would take the full attention ofCradle thirty hours to repair theIroquois , however. The aliens had not landed a single serious shot. Nonetheless, theIroquois had almost been destroyedduring the execution of what some in the fleet were already calling the “Keyes Loop.” Commander Keyes glanced at his data pad and the extensive list of repairs. Fifteen percent of theelectronic systems had to be replaced—burned out from the EMP when the Shiva missile detonated. TheIroquois ’ engines required a full overhaul. Both coolant systems had valves that had been fusedfrom the tremendous heat. Five of the superconducting magnets had to be replaced as well. But most troublesome was the damage to the underside of theIroquois . When they had told CommanderKeyes what had happened, he went outside in a Longsword interceptor to personally inspect what he haddone to his ship. The underside of theIroquois had been scraped when they passed over the prow of the alien destroyer. He knew there was some damage . . . but was not prepared for what he saw. UNSC destroyers had nearly two meters of titaniumabattleplate on their surfaces. Commander Keyeshad abraded throughall of it. He had breached every bottom deck of theIroquois . The jagged serratededges of the plate curled away from the wound. Men in EVA thruster packs were busy cutting off thedamaged sections so new plates could be welded into place. The underside was mirror smooth and perfectly flat. But Keyes knew that the appearance of benignflatness was deceptive. Had the angle of theIroquois been tilted a single degree down, the force of thetwo ships impacting would have shorn his ship in half. The red war stripes that had been painted on theIroquois ’ side looked like bloody slashes. Thedockmaster had privately told Commander Keyes that his crew could buff the paint off—or even repaintthe war stripes, if he wanted. Commander Keyes had politely refused the offer. He wanted them left exactly the way they were. Hewanted to be reminded that while everyone had admired what he had done—it had been an act ofdesperation, not heroism. He wanted to be reminded of how close a brush he had had with death. Commander Keyes returned to theIroquois and marched directly to his quarters. He sat at his antique oak desk and tapped the intercom. “Lieutenant Dominique, you have the bridge forthe next cycle. I am not to be disturbed.” “Aye, Commander. Understood.” Commander Keyes loosened his collar and unbuttoned his uniform. He retrieved the seventy-year-oldbottle of Scotch that his father had given him from the bottom drawer, and then poured four centimetersinto a plastic cup. He had to attend to an even more unpleasant task: what to do about Lieutenant Jaggers. Jaggers had exhibited borderline cowardice, insubordination and come within a hairbreadth of attemptedmutiny during the engagement. Keyes could have had him court-martialed. Every reg in the booksscreamed at him to . . . but he didn’t have it in him to send the young man before a board of inquiry. Hewould instead merely transfer the Lieutenant to a place where he would still do the UNSC some good—perhaps a distant outpost. Was all the blame his? As Commander, it was his responsibility to maintain control, to prevent acrewman from even thinking that mutiny was a possibility. He sighed. Maybe he should have told his crew what he was attempting . . . but there had simply been notime. And certainly, no time for discussion as Jaggers would have wanted. No. The other bridge officershad concerns, but they had followed his orders, as their duty required. As much as Commander Keyes believed in giving people a second chance, this was where he drew theline. To make matters worse, transferring Jaggers would leave a hole in the bridge crew. Commander Keyes accessed the service records ofIroquois ’ junior officers. There were several whomight qualify for navigation officer. He flipped through their files on his data pad, and then paused. The theoretical paper on mass-space compression was still open, as well as his hastily calculated coursecorrections. He smiled and archived those notes. He might one day give a lecture on this battle at the Academy. Itwould be useful to have the original source material. There was also the data from theArchimedes Sensor Outpost. That report had been thoroughly made: clean data graphs and a navigational course plotted for the object through Slipstream space—not an easytask even with an AI. The report even had tags to route it to the astrophysics section of the UNSC. Thoughtful. He looked up the service record of the officer who had filed the report: Ensign William Lovell. Keyes leaned closer. The boy’s Career Service Vitae was almost twice as long as his own. He hadvolunteered and been accepted at Luna Academy. He transferred in his second year, having alreadyreceived a commission to Ensign for heroism in a training flight that had saved the entire crew. He tookduty on the first outbound corvette headed into battle. Three Bronze Stars, a Silver Cluster, and twoPurple Hearts, and he had catapulted to a full Lieutenant within three years. Then something went terribly wrong. Lovell’s decline in the UNSC had been as rapid as his ascent. Fourreports of insubordination and he was busted to Second Lieutenant and transferred twice. An incidentwith a civilian woman—no details in the files, although Commander Keyes wondered if the girl listed inthe report, Anna Gerov, was Vice Admiral Gerov’s daughter. He had been reassigned to theArchimedes Sensor Outpost, and had been there for the last year, anunheard of length of time in such a remote facility. Commander Keyes reviewed the logs when Lovell had been on duty. They were careful and intelligent. So the boy was still sharp . . . was he hiding? There was a gentle knock on his door. “Lieutenant Dominique, I said I was not to be disturbed.” “Sorry to intrude, son,” said a muffled voice. The pressure door’s wheel turned and Admiral Stanforthstepped inside. “But I thought I’d just stop by since I was in the neighborhood.” Admiral Stanforth was much smaller in person than he appeared on-screen. His back was stooped overwith age, and his white hair was thinning at the crown. Still, he exuded a reassuring air of authority thatKeyes instantly recognized. “Sir!” Commander Keyes stood at attention, knocking over his chair. “At ease, son.” The Admiral looked around his quarters, and his gaze lingered a moment on the framedcopy of Lagrange’s original manuscript in which he derived his equations of motion. “You can pour mea few fingers of the whiskey, if you can spare it.” “Yes, sir.” Keyes fumbled with another plastic cup and poured the Admiral a drink. Stanforth took a sip, then sighed appreciatively. “Very nice.” Keyes righted his chair and offered it to the Admiral. He sat down and leaned forward. “I wanted to congratulate you personally on the miracle you performedhere, Keyes.” “Sir, I don’t—” Stanforth held up a finger. “Don’t interrupt me, son. That was a helluva piece of astrogation you pulledoff. People noticed. Not to mention the morale boost it’s given to the entire fleet.” He took another sip ofthe liquor and exhaled. “Now, that’s the reason we’re all here. We need a victory. It’s been too damnlong—us getting whittled to pieces by those alien bastards. So this hasgot to be a win. No matter what ittakes.” “I understand, sir,” Commander Keyes said. He knew morale had been sagging for years throughout theUNSC. No military, no matter how well trained, could stomach defeat after defeat without it affectingtheir determination in battles. “How is it going planetside?” “Right now don’t you worry about that.” Admiral Stanforth eased back in his chair, balancing on twolegs. “General Kits has his troops down there. They’ve got the surrounding cities evacuated, and they’llbe assaulting C.te d’Azur within the hour. They’ll paste those aliens faster than you can spit. You justwatch.” “Of course, sir.” Commander Keyes looked away. “You got something else to say, boy? Spit it out.” “Well, sir . . . this isn’t the way the Covenant normally operates. Dropping an invasion force and leavingthe system? They either slaughter everything or die trying. This is something altogether different.” Admiral Stanforth waved a dismissive hand. “You leave trying to figure out what those aliens arethinking to the spooks in ONI, son. Just get theIroquois patched up and fit for duty again. And you letme know if you need anything.” Stanforth knocked back the last of his whiskey and stood. “Got to marshal the fleet. Oh—” He paused. “One more thing.” He dug into his jacket pocket and retrieved a tiny cardboard box. He set it on theCommander’s desk. “Consider it official. The paperwork will catch up with us soon enough.” Commander Keyes opened the box. Inside were a pair of brass collar insignia: four bars and a single star. “Congratulations,Captain Keyes.” The Admiral snapped a quick salute, then held out his hand. Keyes managed to grasp and shake the Admiral’s hand. The insignia was real. He was stunned. Hecouldn’t say anything. “You’ve earned it.” The Admiral started to turn. “Give me a shout if you need anything.” “Yes, sir.” Keyes stared at the brass star and stripes a moment longer then finally tore his gaze away. “Admiral . . . there is one thing. I need a replacement navigation officer.” Admiral Stanforth’s relaxed posture stiffened. “I heard about that. Ugly business when a bridge officerloses their stomach. Well, you just say the candidate’s name and I’ll make sure you get him . . . as longas you’re not pulling him off my ship.” He smiled. “Keep up the good work, Captain.” “Sir!” Captain Keyes saluted. The Admiral stepped out and closed the door. Keyes practically fell into his chair. He had never dreamed they’d make him a Captain. He turned the brass insignia over in his palm andreplayed his conversation with Admiral Stanforth in his mind. He had said, “Captain Keyes.” Yes. Thiswas real. The Admiral had also brushed aside his concerns about the Covenant too quickly. Something didn’tquite add up. Keyes clicked on the intercom. “Lieutenant Dominique: track the Admiral’s shuttle when he leaves. Letme know which ship he’s on.” “Sir? We had an Admiral aboard? I wasn’t informed.” “No, Lieutenant, I suspect you weren’t. Just track the next outbound shuttle.” “Aye, sir.” Keyes looked back on his data pad and reread Ensign Lovell’s CSV. He couldn’t take back what hadhappened with Jaggers—there could be no second chance for him. But maybe he could somehowbalance the books by giving Lovell another chance. He filled out the necessary paperwork for the transfer request. The forms were long and unnecessarilycomplex. He transmitted the files to UNSC PERSCOM and sent a copy directly to Admiral Stanforth’sstaff. “Sir?” Lieutenant Dominique’s voice broke over the intercom. “That shuttle docked with theLeviathan .” “Put it on-screen.” The screen over his desk snapped on to camera five, the aft-starboard view. Among the dozens of shipsin orbit around Sigma Octanus IV, he easily spotted theLeviathan . She was one of the twenty UNSCcruisers left in the fleet. A cruiser was the most powerful warship ever built by human hands. And Keyes knew they were beingslowly pulled out of forward areas and parked in reserve to guard the Inner Colonies. A piece of shadow moved under the great warship, black moving on black. It revealed itself for only aninstant in the sunlight, then slithered back into the darkness. It was a prowler. Those stealth ships were used exclusively by Naval Intelligence. A cruiser and an ONI presence here? Now Keyes knew there was more going on here than a simplemorale boost. He tried not to think about it. It was best not to go too far when questioning the intentionsof one’s superior officer—especially when that officer was an Admiral. And especially not when NavalIntelligence was literally lurking in the shadows. Keyes poured himself another three fingers of Scotch, set his head on his desk—just to rest his eyes for amoment. The last few hours had drained him. “Sir.” Dominique’s voice over the intercom woke Captain Keyes. “Incoming fleet-wide transmission onAlpha priority channel.” Keyes sat up and ran his hand over his face. He glanced at the brass clock affixed over his bunk—he hadslept for almost six hours. Admiral Stanforth appeared on-screen. “Listen up, ladies and gentlemen: we’ve just detected a largenumber of Covenant ships massing on the edge of the system. We estimate ten ships.” On-screen the silhouettes of the all-too-familiar Covenant frigates and a destroyer appeared as ghostlyradar smears. “We’ll remain where we are,” the Admiral continued. “There’s no need to charge in and have those uglybastards take a shortcut through Slipspace and undercut us. Make your ships ready for battle. We’ve gotprobes gathering more data. I’ll update you when we know more. Stanforth out.” The screen went black. Keyes snapped on the intercom. “Lieutenant Hall, what is our repair and refit status?” “Sir,”she replied.“Engines are operational, but only with the backup coolant system. We can heat themto fifty percent. Archer and nuclear ordnance resupply is complete. MAC guns are also operational. Repairs to lower decks have just started.” “Inform the dockmaster to pull his crew out,” Captain Keyes said. “We’re leaving theCradle . When weare clear, fire the reactors to fifty percent. Go to battle stations.” Chapter 19 0600 Hours, July 18, 2552 (Military Calendar) /Sigma Octanus IV, grid thirteen by twenty-four“Faster!” Corporal Harland shouted. “You want to die in the mud, Marine?” “Hell no, sir!” Private Fincher stomped on the accelerator and the Warthog’s tires spun in the streambed. They caught, and the vehicle fishtailed through the gravel, across the bank, and onto the sandy shore. Harland strapped himself into the rear of the Warthog, one hand clamped onto the vehicle’s massive50mm chain-gun. Something moved in the brush behind them—Harland fired a sustained burst. The deafening sound from“Old Faithful” shook the teeth in his head. Ferns, trees, and vines exploded and splintered as the gunfirescythed through the foliage . . . then nothing was moving anymore. Fincher sent the Warthog bouncing along the shore, his head bobbing from side to side as he strained tosee through the downpour. “We’re sitting ducks in here, Corporal,” Fincher yelled. “We have to get outof this hole and back onto the ridge, sir.” Corporal Harland looked for a way out of this river gorge. “Walker!” He shook Private Walker in thepassenger seat, but Walker didn’t respond. He clutched their last Jackhammer rocket launcher with adeath grip, his eyes staring blankly ahead. Walker hadn’t said a word since this mission went south. Harland hoped he would snap out of it. He already had one man down. The last thing he needed was forhis heavy-weapons specialist to be a brain case. Private Cochran lay at the Corporal’s feet, cradling his gut with blood-smeared hands. He’d caught fireduring the ambush. The aliens used some kind of projectile weapon that fired long, thin needles—whichexploded seconds after impact. Cochran’s insides were meat. Walker and Fincher had filled him up with biofoam and taped him up—they even managed to stop the bleeding—but if the man didn’t get to a medic soon, he was a goner. They had all almost been goners. The squad had left Firebase Bravo two hours ago. Satellite images showed the way was all clear to theirtarget area. Lieutenant McCasky had even said it was a “milk run”. They were supposed to set upmotion sensors on grid thirteen by twenty-four—just see what was there and get back. “A simple snoopjob,” the ell-tee had called it. What no one told McCasky was that the satellites weren’t penetrating the rain and jungle canopy of thisswampball too well. If the Lieutenant had thought about it—like Corporal Harland was thinking about itnow—he would have figured something was wrong with sending three squads on a “milk run.” The squad wasn’t green. Corporal Harland and the others had fought the Covenant before. They knewhow to kill Grunts—when they massed by the hundreds, they knew to call in air support. They’d eventaken down a few of the Covenant Jackals, the ones with energy shields. You had to flank those guys—take them out with snipers. But none of that had prepared them for this mission. They had done all the right things, damn it. The Lieutenant had even gotten their Warthogs five klicksdown the streambed before the terrain became too steep and slippery for the all-terrain armored vehicles. He had the men hump the rest of the way in on foot. They moved soft and silent, almost crawling allthey way through the slime to the depression they were supposed to check out. When they had gotten to the place, it wasn’t just another mud-filled sinkhole. A waterfall splashed into agrotto pool. Arches had been carved into the wall, their edges extremely weathered. There were a fewscattered paving stones around the pool . . . and covering those stones were tiny geometric carvings. That’s all Corporal Harland got a look at before the Lieutenant ordered him and his team to fall back. Hewanted them to set up the motion sensors where they had a clear line of sight to the sky. That’s probably why they were still alive. The blast had knocked Harland and his team into the mud. They ran to where they had left the Lieutenant—found fused glassy mud, a crater, and a few burning corpses and bits of carbonized skeleton. They saw one other thing—an outline in the mist. It was biped, but much larger than any human Harlandhad ever seen. And oddly, it looked like it was wearing armor reminiscent of medieval plate mail; iteven carried a large, strangely shaped metal shield. Harland saw the glow of a regenerating plasma weapon . . . and that’s all he needed to see to order a fullspeed retreat. Harland, Walker, Cochran, and Fincher fell back, running—blindly firing their assault rifles. Covenant Grunts had followed them, peppering the air with those needle guns, mowing down the jungleas the tiny razor shards exploded. Harland and the others stopped and hit the deck, splashing into the thick, red mud, as a CovenantBanshee passed them overhead. When they got back on their feet, Cochran took the round in the stomach. The Grunts had caught up tothem. Cochran flinched, his side exploded, and then he crumpled to the ground. He fell into shock sofast he didn’t even have time to scream. Harland, Fincher, and Walker hunkered down and returned fire. They killed a dozen of the littlebastards, but more kept coming, their barks and growls echoing through the jungle. “Cease fire,” the Corporal had ordered. He waited a second, then tossed a grenade when the Grunts gotcloser. Their ears still ringing, they ran, dragging Cochran with them, and not looking back. Somehow they had returned to the Warthog, and gotten the hell out of there . . . or, at least, that’s whatthey were trying to do. “Over there,” Fincher said, and pointed to a clearing in the trees. “That’s got to lead up to the ridge.” “Go,” Harland said. The Warthog slid sideways then raced up the embankment, caught air, and landed on soft jungle loam. Fincher dodged a few trees and ran the Warthog up the slope. They emerged on the ridgeline. “Jesus, that was close,” Harland said. He ran a muddy hand through his hair, slicking it back. He tapped Fincher on the shoulder. Fincher jumped. “Private, pull over. Try to raise Firebase Bravo onthe narrow band.” “Yes, sir,” Fincher answered in a wavering voice. He glanced at the near-catatonic Private Walker andshook his head. Harland checked on Cochran. Private Cochran’s eyes fluttered open, cracking the mud caked onto hisface. “We back yet, Corporal?” “Almost,” Harland replied. Cochran’s pulse was steady, although his face had, in the last severalminutes, drained of color. The wounded man looked like a corpse.Damn it, Harland thought,he’s goingto bleed out . Harland placed a reassuring hand on Cochran’s shoulder. “Hang in there. We’ll patch you up as soon aswe get to camp.” They had dropships at Bravo. Cochran had a chance, albeit a slim one, if they got him back to thecombat surgeons at headquarters—or better yet, to the Navy docs on the orbiting ships. For a momentHarland was dazzled with visions of clean sheets, hot meals—and a meter of armor between him and theCovenant. “Nothing but static on the link, sir,” Fincher said, breaking through Harland’s reverie. “Maybe the radio got hit,” Harland muttered. “You know those explosive needles throw a bunch ofmicroshrapnel. We probably got slivers of that stuff inside us, too.” Fincher examined his muscular forearms. “Great.” “Move out,” Harland said. The tires of the Warthog spun, gripped, and the vehicle moved rapidly along the ridge. The terrain looked familiar. Harland even spotted three sets of Warthog tracks—yes, this was the waythe Lieutenant had brought them. Ten minutes and they’d be back on base. No more worries. He relaxed,took out a pack of cigarettes, and shook one out. He pulled off the safety strip and tapped the end toignite it. Fincher revved the engine and shot up to the top of the ridge—crossed over, and skidded to halt. If not for the haze, they would have seen everything from this side of the valley—the lush carpet ofjungle in the valley, the river meandering through it, and on the far set of hills, a clearing dotted withfixed gun emplacements, razor wire, and pre-fab structures: Firebase Bravo. Their platoon had partially dug into the hillside to minimize the camp’s footprint and provide a placewhere they could safely store their munitions and bunk down. A ring of sensors encircled the camp sonothing could sneak up on them. Radar and motion detectors linked to surface-to-air missile batteries. Aroad ran along the far ridge—three klicks down that was the coastal city, C.te d’Azur. The sun broke through the haze overhead, and Corporal Harland saw everything had changed. It wasn’t fog or haze. Smoke rose in columns from the valley . . . and there was no more jungle. Everything had been burned to the ground. The entire valley was blackened into smoldering charcoal. Glowing red craters honeycombed the hillsides. He fumbled with his binoculars, brought them to his eyes . . . and froze. The hill where the camp hadbeen was gone—it had been flattened. Only a mirror surface remained. The sides of the adjacent hillsglistened with a cracked glass coating. The air was thick with tiny Covenant fliers in the distance. On theground, Grunts and Jackals searched for survivors. A few Marines ran for cover . . . there were hundredsof wounded and dead on the ground, helpless, screaming—some of them trying to crawl away. “What have you got, sir?” Fincher asked. The cigarette fell from Harland’s mouth and caught on his shirt—but he didn’t take his eyes off thebattlefield to brush it away. “There’s nothing left,” he whispered. A shape moved in the valley—much larger than the other Grunts and Jackals. Its outline was blurry. Harland tried to focus the binoculars on it but couldn’t. It was the same thing he had seen at grid thirteenby twenty-four. The Grunts gave it a wide berth. The thing lifted its arm—its whole arm looked like onebig gun—and a bolt of plasma struck near the riverbank. Even from this distance, Harland heard the screams of the men who had been hiding there. “Jesus.” He dropped the binoculars. “We’re bugging out, right now!” he said. “Turn this beast around,Fincher.” “But—” “They’re gone,” Harland whispered. “They’re all dead.” Walker whimpered and rocked back and forth. “We’ll be dead, too, unless you move,” Harland said. “We already got lucky once today. Let’s not pushit.” “Yeah.” Fincher reversed the Warthog. “Yeah, some luck.” He sped back down the hillside and hopped the Warthog off the embankment and back into thestreambed. “Follow the river,” Harland told him. “It’ll take us all the way to HQ.” A shadow crossed their path. Harland twisted around and saw a pair of stubby-winged CovenantBanshees swooping down after them. “Move it!” he screamed at Fincher. Fincher floored the Warthog and plumes of water sprayed in their wake. They bounced over rocks andfishtailed across the stream. Bolts of plasma hit the water next to them—exploding into steam. Rock shards pinged off the armoredside of the vehicle. “Walker!” Harland shouted. “Use those Jackhammers.” Walker huddled, doubled over in his seat. Harland fired the chain-gun. Tracers cut through the air. The fliers nimbly dodged them. The heavymachine gun was only accurate at reasonably short ranges—and not even that with Fincher bouncing theWarthog all over the place. “Walker!” he cried. “We are gonna die if you don’t get those missiles into the air!” He would have ordered Fincher to grab the launcher—but he’d have to stop to grab it . . . that, or try todrive with no hands. If the Warthog stopped, they’d be sitting ducks for those fliers. Harland glanced at the riverbanks. They were too steep for the Warthog. They were stuck in the riverwith no cover. “Walker, do something!” Corporal Harland fired the chain-gun again until his arms went numb. It was no good; the Bansheeswere too far away, too quick. Another plasma bolt hit—directly in front of the Warthog. Heat washed over Harland. Blisterspinpricked his back. He screamed but kept shooting. If they hadn’t been in water, that plasma would have melted the tires . . . probably would have flash-fried them all. A burst of heat and a plume of smoke erupted next to Harland. For a split second he thought the Covenant gunners had found their mark—that he was dead. Hescreamed incoherently, his thumbs jamming down the chain-gun’s trigger buttons. The Banshee he was aiming at flashed, and then became a ball of flame and falling shrapnel. He turned, his breath hitching in his chest. They hadn’t been hit. Cochran knelt next to him. One arm clutched his stomach, and the other arm hefted the Jackhammerlauncher on his shoulder. He smiled with bloodstained lips and pivoted to track the other flier. Harland ducked, and another missile whooshed directly over his head. Cochran laughed, coughing up blood and foam. Tears of mirth or pain—Harland couldn’t tell—streamedfrom his eyes. He collapsed backward, and let the smoldering launcher slip from his hand. The second Banshee exploded and spiraled into the jungle. “Two more klicks,” Fincher shouted. “Hang on.” He cranked the wheel and the Warthog swerved out ofthe streambed and bounced up the hillside, up and over, and they slid onto a paved road. Harland leaned over and felt Cochran’s neck for a pulse. It was there, weak; but he was still alive. Harland glanced at Walker. He hadn’t moved, his eyes squeezed shut. Harland’s first impulse was to shoot him right then and there—the goddamned, goldbricking, cowardlybastard almost cost them all their lives—No. Harland was half amazed he hadn’t frozen up, too. HQ was ahead. But Corporal Harland’s stomach sank as he saw smoke and flames blazing on thehorizon. They passed the first armed checkpoint. The guardhouse and bunkers had been blasted away, and in themud were thousands of Grunt tracks. Farther back, he saw a circle of sandbags around a house-size chunk of granite. Two Marines waved tothem. As they approached in the Warthog, the Marines stood and saluted. Harland jumped off and returned their salute. One of the Marines had a patch over his eye and his head was bandaged. Soot streaked his face. “Jesus,sir,” he said. “It’s good to see you guys.” He approached the Warthog. “You’ve got a working radio inthat thing?” “I—I’m not sure,” Corporal Harland said. “Who’s in charge here? What happened?” “Covenant hit us hard, sir. They had tanks, air support—thousands of those little Grunt guys. Theyglassed the main barracks. The Command Office. Almost got the munitions bunker.” He looked awayfor a moment and his one eye glazed over. “We pulled it together and fought ’em off, though. That wasan hour ago. I think we killed everything. I’m not sure.” “Who’s in charge, Private? I have a critically wounded man. He needs evac, and I have to make myreport.” The Private shook his head. “I’m sorry, sir. The hospital was the first thing they hit. As far as who’s incommand . . . I think you’re the ranking officer here.” “Great,” Harland muttered. “We’ve got five guys back there.” The Private jerked his head toward the columns of smoke andwavering heat in the distance. “They’re in fire-fighting suits to keep from burning up. They’rerecovering weapons and ammo.” “Understood,” Harland said. “Fincher, try the radio again. See if you can link up to SATCOM. Call infor an evac.” “Roger that,” Fincher said. The wounded Private asked Harland, “Can we get help from Firebase Bravo, sir?” “No,” Harland said. “They got hit, too. There’s Covenant all over the place.” The Private slumped, bracing himself with his rifle. Fincher handed Harland the radio headset. “Sir, SATCOM is good. I’ve got theLeviathan on the horn.” “This is Corporal Harland.” He spoke into the microphone. “The Covenant has hit Firebase Bravo andAlpha HQ . . . and wiped them out. We’ve repelled the enemy from Alpha site, but our casualties havebeen nearly one hundred percent. We have wounded here. We need immediate evac. Say again: we needevac on the double.” “Roger, Corporal. Your situation is understood. Evac is not possible at this time. We’ve got problems ofour own up here—”There was a burst of static. The voice came back online.“Help is on the way.” The channel went dead. Harland looked to Fincher. “Check the transceiver.” Fincher ran the diagnostic. “It’s working,” he said. “I’m getting a ping from SATCOM.” He licked hislips. “The trouble must be on their end.” Harland didn’t want to think of what kind of trouble the fleet could be having. He’d seen too manyplanets glassed from orbit. He didn’t want to die here—not like that. He turned to the men in the bunker. “They said help is on the way. So relax.” He looked into the sky andwhispered, “They better send a whole regiment down here.” A handful of other Marines returned to the bunker. They had salvaged ammunition, extra rifles, a crateof frag grenades, and a few Jackhammer missiles. Fincher took the Warthog and a few men to see if hecould transport the heavier weapons. They filled Cochran with more biofoam and bandaged him up. He slipped into a coma. They hunkered down inside the bunker and waited. They heard explosions at an extreme distance. Walker finally spoke. “So . . . now what, sir?” Harland didn’t turn toward the man. He covered Cochran with another blanket. “I don’t know. Can youfight?” “I think so.” He passed Walker a rifle. “Good. Get up there and stand watch.” He got out a cigarette, lit it, took a puff,and then handed it to Walker. Walker took it, shakily stood, and went outside. “Sir!” he said. “Dropship inbound. One of ours!” Harland grabbed his signal flares. He ran outside and squinted at the horizon. High on the edge of thedarkening sky was a dot, and the unmistakable roar of Pelican engines. He pulled the pin and tossed thesmoker onto the ground. A moment later, thick clouds of green smoke roiled into the sky. The dropship turned rapidly and descended toward their location. Harland shielded his eyes. He searched for the rest of the dropships. There was only one. “Onedropship?” Walker whispered. “That’s all they sent? Christ, that’s not backup—that’s a burialdetail.” The Pelican eased toward the ground, spattering mud in a ten-meter radius, then touched down. Thelaunch ramp fell open and a dozen figures marched out. For a moment Harland thought they were the same creatures he had seen earlier—armored and biggerthan any human he’d ever laid eyes on. He froze—he couldn’t have raised his gun if he had wanted to. They were human, though. The one in the lead stood over two meters tall and looked like he weighedtwo hundred kilograms. His armor was a strange reflective green alloy, and underneath matte black. Their motions were so fluid and graceful—fast and precise, too. More like robots than flesh and blood. The one that first stepped off the ship strode toward him. Though his armor was devoid of insignia,Harland could see the insignia of a Master Chief Petty Officer in his helmet’s HUD. “Master Chief, sir!” Harland snapped to attention and saluted. “Corporal,” it said. “At ease. Get your men together and we’ll get to work.” “Sir?” Harland asked. “I’ve got a lot of wounded here. What work will we be doing, sir?” The Master Chief’s helmet cocked quizzically to one side. “We’ve come to take Sigma Octanus Fourback from the Covenant, Corporal,” he said calmly. “To do that, we’re going to kill every last one ofthem.” Chapter 20 1800 Hours, July 18, 2552 (Military Calendar) /Sigma Octanus IV, grid nineteen by thirty-sevenThe Master Chief surveyed what was left of Camp Alpha. There were only fourteen Marine regulars left—balanced against the four hundred men and women who had been slaughtered here. He said to Kelly, “Post a guard on the dropship, and put three on patrol. Take the rest and secure the LZ.” “Yes, sir.” She turned to face the other Spartans, pointed, made three quick hand gestures, and theydispersed like ghosts. The Master Chief turned to the Corporal. “Are you in command here, Corporal?” The man looked around. “I guess so . . . yes, sir.” “As of 0900 Standard Military time, NavSpecWep is assuming control of this operation. All Marinepersonnel now report through our chain of command. Understand, Corporal?” “Yes, sir.” “Now, Corporal, brief me on what happened here.” Corporal Harland hunkered down and sketched rough maps of the area as he quickly recounted thebrutal series of surprise attacks. “Right here—grid thirteen by twenty-four. That’s where they hit us, sir. Something’s goin’ on there.” The Master Chief scanned the crude maps, compared them with the area surveys displayed in his HUD,then nodded, satisfied. “Get your wounded inside the Pelican, Corporal,” he said. “We’ll be dusting off soon. I want you torotate by thirds on guard duty. The rest of your men should get some sleep. But make no mistake—if thePelican gets fragged, we’ll be staying on Sigma Octanus Four.” The Corporal paled, then replied, “Understood, sir.” He stood slowly—the long day of combat and flighthad taken its toll. The Marine saluted, then moved to assemble his team. Inside his sealed helmet, John frowned. These Marines were now under his command . . . and thereforepart of his team. They lacked the Spartans’ firepower and training, so they had to be protected—notrelied upon. He had to make sure they got out in one piece. Another snag in an already dicey mission. The Master Chief opened his COM link: “Team leaders meet me at the LZ in three minutes.” Lights winked on his heads-up display—his Spartans acknowledging the order. He looked around at the destruction. Thin sunlight reflected dully from the thousands of spent shellcasings strewn across the battlefield. Dozens of shattered Warthog chassis bled trails of smoke into thehazy sky. Scores of burned corpses lay in the mud. They’d have to get a burial detail down here later . . . before the Grunts got to the dead. The Master Chief would never question his orders, but he felt a momentary stab of bitterness. Whoeverset these camps up without proper reconnaissance, whoever had blindly trusted the satellitetransmissions in an enemy-held region, had been a fool. Worse, they had wasted the lives of good soldiers. Green Team’s leader jogged in from the south. The Master Chief couldn’t see her features through herreflective faceplate, but he could tell without checking his HUD that it was Linda by the way shemoved . . . that, and the SRS99C-S2 AM sniper rile with Oracle scope she carried. She carefully looked around, verified that the area was secure, and slung her rifle. She snapped a crispsalute. “Reporting as ordered, Master Chief.” Red Team leader—Joshua—ran in from the east. He saluted. “Motion detectors, radar, and automateddefenses up and running, sir.” “Good. Let’s go over this one more time.” The Master Chief overlaid a topographic map on theirhelmets’ displays. “Mission goal one: we need to gather intelligence on Covenant troop disposition anddefenses at C.te d’Azur. Mission goal two: if there are no civilian survivors, we are authorized toremote detonate a HAVOK tactical nuclear mine and remove the enemy forces. In the meantime, wewill minimize our contact with the enemy.” They nodded. The Master Chief highlighted the four streams that fed into the river delta near C.te d’Azur. “We avoidthese routes. Banshees patrol them.” He circled where Firebase Bravo had been. “We’ll avoid this areaas well—according to the Marine survivors, that area is hot. Grid thirteen by twenty-four also hasactivity. “Red Leader, take your squad in along the coast. Stay in the tree line. Green Leader, follow thisridgeline, but keep under cover, too. I’ll be taking this route.” The Master Chief traced a path through aparticularly dense section of jungle. “It’s 1830 hours now. The city is thirteen kilometers from here—that should take us no more than fortyminutes. We’ll probably be forced to slow down to avoid enemy patrols—but we all should be in placeno later than 1930 hours.” He zoomed into a city map of C.te d’Azur. “Entry points to the city sewer system are—” He highlightedthe display with NAV points. “—here, here, and here. Red Team will recon the wharf areas. Green takesthe residential section. I’ll take Blue Team downtown. Questions?” “Our communications underground will be limited,” Linda said. “How do we check in while keepingour heads down?” “According to the Colonial Administration Authority’s file on C.te d’Azur, the sewer systems here havesteel pipes running along the top of the plastic conduits. Tap into those and use ground-returntransceivers to check in. We’ll have our own private COM line.” “Roger,” she said. The Master Chief said, “As soon as we leave, the dropship dusts off and will move here.” He indicated aposition far to the south of Alpha camp. “If the Pelican doesn’t make it . . . our fallback rendezvouspoint is here.” He indicated a point fifty kilometers south. “ONI’s welcoming committee has stashed ouremergency SATCOM link and survival gear there.” No one mentioned that survival gear would be useless when the Covenant glassed the planet. “Stay sharp,” John said. “And come back in one piece. Dismissed.” They saluted briskly, then sprinted to their tasks. He switched to Blue Team’s frequency. “Time to saddle up, Blue Team,” he called out. “RV back at thebunker for orders.” Three blue lights winked acknowledgement in his display. A moment later, the other three Spartans in his squad trotted into position. “Reporting as ordered,” Blue-Two announced. The Master Chief quickly filled them in on the mission. “Blue-Two.” He nodded to Kelly. “You’recarrying the nuke and medical gear.” “Affirmative. Who’ll have the detonator, sir?” “I will,” he replied. “Blue-Three.” He turned to Fred. “You have the explosives. James, you’ll take ourextra COM equipment.” They double-checked their gear: modified MA5B assault rifles, adapted to mount silencers; ten extraclips of ammunition; frag grenades; combat knives; M6D pistols—small but powerful handguns thatfired .450 Magnum loads, sufficient to crack through Grunt armor. In addition to the weapons, there was a single smoke canister—blue smoke to signal for pickup. Johnwould carry that. “Let’s go,” he said. Blue Team moved out. They quickly entered the jungle, in a simple single-file line with Blue-Four in thelead; James had an instinct for walking point. The line was slightly staggered, with John and Kellyslightly to the left of James. Fred brought up the rear. They moved cautiously. Every hundred yards, James signaled the group to halt while he methodicallysurveyed the area for any sign of the enemy. The rest of Blue Team crouched, and disappeared into thethick jungle foliage. John checked his HUD; they were one-quarter of the way to the city. The team made good time despitethe cautious pace. The MJOLNIR assault armor allowed them to push their way through the thick junglelike it was a stroll through the woods. As the team moved on, the thin mist that permeated the jungle gave way to a hard, pelting rain. Thedamp ground gradually turned to mud, forcing the team to slow. Blue-Four stopped dead and raised his fist—the signal to halt and freeze. John stopped in his tracks, hisrifle raised and sweeping slowly back and forth, searching for any sign of enemy movement. Normally, the Spartans relied on their armor’s detection gear to locate enemy troops. But their motionsensors were useless—everything moved in the jungle. They had to rely on their eyes and ears and theinstincts of their point man. “Point to Team Leader: enemy contact.”James’ calm voice crackled across the COM channel.“Enemytroops within one hundred meters of my position, ten degrees left.” With exaggerated slowness, Blue-Four indicated the danger area by pointing. “Affirmative,” John replied. “Blue Team: hold position.” Although the motion trackers were of no use here, thermal proved effective. Through the thick sheets ofrain, the Master Chief spotted three cold spots: Grunts in their chilled environmental suits. “Blue Team: enemy contact confirmed.” He added the enemy position to his HUD. “Estimated enemystrength, Point?” “Lead, I make ten, say again, ten Covenant troops. Grunts, sir. They’re moving slowly. Double-fileformation. They haven’t spotted us. Orders?” John’s orders said to minimize contact with the enemy where possible—the Spartans were spread toothinly across the battle area to risk a prolonged engagement. But the Grunts were heading right for theMarine bunker . . . “Let’s take them out, Blue Team,” he said. The team of Grunts slogged through the mud. The vaguely simian aliens wore shiny red-trimmed armor. Craggy, purple-black hide was visible beneath the environmental suits. Breath masks providedsupercooled methane—the aliens’ atmosphere. There were ten of them, moving in two columns andspaced roughly three meters apart. John noted with satisfaction that they seemed bored—only the point man and the pair on rear guard hadtheir plasma rifles at the ready. The rest chattered at each other in a weird combination of high-pitchedsqueaks and guttural barks. Easy, relaxed targets. Perfect. He gave a series of slow hand signals to the rest of the team; they faded back until they were well awayfrom the Grunts’ field of view. The Master Chief opened the squadwide COM channel. “They’re seventy meters from this depression—” He keyed a NAV point into the team’s topographic display. “They’re heading for the western hilland will probably follow the terrain to the top. We’ll fall back now, and take concealed positions alongthe eastern hill. “Blue-Four, you’re our scout—stay near the bottom and let us know when the rear guard passes you. Take them out first—they seem alert. “Blue-Two, you have overwatch at the top of the hill. “Blue-Three, back me up. Silenced weapons only—no explosives, unless things go bad.” He paused, then gave the order: “Move out.” The Spartans crept back along their path and spread out along the hill. John—in the center of the line—readied his assault rifle. The team was virtually invisible in the thickfoliage, and covered by the barrelwide tree trunks of the local flora. One minute ticked by. Then two . . . three . . . Blue-Four’s acknowledgment signal blinked twice in John’s HUD.Enemy detected. He relaxed his gripon the weapon, waiting——There. Twenty meters distant, the Grunt point man moved to the edge of the western hill, justdownhill from John’s position. The alien paused, his plasma rifle sweeping the area—then movedslowly up the rise. A moment later, the rest of the formation came into view, ten meters behind the point man. Blue-Four’s indicator winked again.Now. The Master Chief opened fire, a short, three-round burst. The weapon’s muffled cough was inaudibleover the sound of jungle rainfall. The trio of armor-piercing rounds slashed through the alien’s throatprotection, rupturing the environment suit. The Grunt clutched at his neck, emitted a brief, high-pitchedgurgle—then fell to the mud, dead. A moment later, the Grunt lines came to a clumsy halt, confused. John spotted two strobe flashes, and the pair of Covenant rear guards dropped to the ground. “Blue-Two to Lead: rear-guard eliminated.” “Hit them!” John barked. The four Spartans opened fire in short bursts. In less than a second, four more of the Grunt patrol weredown, dead from head shots. The remaining trio of Grunts unslung their plasma rifles, swinging them wildly back and forth, lookingfor targets and chattering loudly in their strange, barking language. John sighted on the alien closest tohim and squeezed the trigger. The alien splashed into the mud, methane bubbling from his shattered breath mask. Another pair of sustained bursts and the last of the Grunts were down. * * *Kelly policed the Grunts’ weapons and handed a plasma rifle to each of the team; the Spartans hadstanding orders to seize Covenant weapons and technology whenever possible. Blue Team fanned out and continued on their way. When they heard Banshees overhead, they hunkereddown in the mud, and the fliers passed. Ten more kilometers of rough terrain and then the jungle stopped and fields of rice paddies stretched outbefore them all the way to C.te d’Azur. Crossing these would be more difficult than the jungle. They donned camouflage cloaks that maskedtheir thermal signatures and crawled through the muck on their stomachs. The Master Chief saw three larger ships hovering over the city. If they were troop transports, they couldcarry thousands of Covenant soldiers. If they were warships, any direct ground assault against the citywould be futile. Either way it was bad news. He made sure his vid and audio mission recorders got a good clear image of the vessels. When they emerged from the mud, they were near the beach on the edge of the city. The Master Chiefchecked his map readings and made his way to the sewage outlet. The two-meter diameter pipe was sealed with a steel grate. He and Fred easily bent the bars aside andentered. They sloshed through hip-deep muck. The Master Chief didn’t like the cramped quarters. Their mobilitywas restricted by the narrow pipes; worse, they were bunched up and therefore easier to kill withgrenades or massed fire. Motion sensors picked up hundreds of targets. The constant downpour fromstorm drains above made the sensors useless. He followed his electronic map through the maze of pipes. Light filtered in from above—beams ofillumination connected to the manhole-cover vent holes. Every so often something moved and blockedthat light. The Spartans moved quickly and quietly through the sludge and halted when they reached their finalwaypoint—directly under the center of C.te d’Azur’s “downtown.” With a tiny jerk of his head, the Master Chief informed Blue Team to spread out and keep their eyespeeled. He snaked a fiber-optic probe up through the drain grate at street level and plugged it into hishelmet. The yellow light from the sodium vapor lamps washed everything topside in an eerie glow. There wereGrunts positioned on the street corners, and the shadow of a Banshee flier circling overhead. The electric cars parked on the street had been overturned, and the waste receptacles had been knockedover or set on fire. Every street-level window was broken. The Master Chief saw no human civilians,alive or otherwise. Blue Team moved up and over a block. The Master Chief checked topside again. There was more activity here: a pack of black-armored Grunts meandered down the streets. Two vultureheadedJackals sat on the corner, squabbling over a hunk of meat. Something else caught his attention, though. There were other aliens on the sidewalk—or rather,abovethe sidewalk. They were roughly man-size creatures—unlike any he had ever encountered. The creatureswere vaguely sluglike, with pale, purple-pink skin. Unlike other Covenant forces, they were not bipeds. Instead they had several tentacular appendages sprouting from their thick trunks. They floated a half meter above the ground, as if the odd, pink bladders on their backs kept them aloft. One alien used a slender tentacle to open the hood of a car. It began to disassemble the car’s electricengine, moving with startling speed. Within twenty seconds all the parts had been neatly arranged in rows on the pavement. The creaturepaused, then reassembled the parts with blinding quickness, disassembled and rebuilt it several timesinto different arrangements. Finally, the creature simply reassembled the car and floated on its way. The Master Chief made sure his mission recorder had gotten that. This was a Covenant race neverdocumented before. He rotated the fiber-optic cable to point down the opposite end of the street. There was more activityanother block away. He retracted the probe and moved Blue Team a block farther south. He signaled the team to holdposition, then climbed up a short series of metal handholds until he was just below a manhole cover. He cautiously sent the probe topside again, up through the manhole-cover vent. There was a Jackal’s hoof directly adjacent to the probe, blocking half of his field of vision. He turnedthe probe with excruciating slowness, and saw fifty more Jackals milling back and forth. They wereconcentrated around the building across the street. The building resembled pictures that Déjà had shownhim years ago—it looked like an Athenian temple, with white marble steps and Ionic columns. At thetop of the steps were a pair of stationary guns. More bad news. He pulled the probe back and consulted the map. The building was marked as the C.te d’Azur Museumof Natural History. The Covenant had serious firepower here—the stationary guns had commanding fields of fire, making afrontal assault suicidal.Why would they protect a human structure? he wondered. Was it theirheadquarters? The Master Chief signaled for Blue-Two. He pointed to the accessway that led under the building. Heheld up two fingers, pointed toward her eyes, and then down the passage, and then slowly balled hishand into a fist. Kelly proceeded very slowly down that passage to scout it out. The Master Chief checked the time. Red and Green Teams were due to report. He had James attach theground-return transceiver to the pipes overhead. “Green Team, come in.” “Roger: Green Team Leader here, sir,”Linda whispered over the channel.“We’ve scouted theresidential section.” There was a pause.“No survivors . . . just like Draco Three. We’re too late.” He understood. They’d seen it before. The Covenant didn’t take prisoners. On Draco III, they hadwatched via satellite linkup as human survivors were herded together and ripped apart by ravenousGrunts and Jackals. By the time the Spartans had gotten there, there was no one left to rescue. But the victims had been avenged. “Green Team: stand by and prepare to fall back to the RV and secure the area,” he said. “Standing by,”Linda said. He switched to the Red Team COM channel: “Red Team, report.” Joshua’s voice crackled over the link:“Red Leader, sir. We’ve got something for ONI. We’vespottedsome new type of Covenant race. Little guys that float. They seem to be some sort of explorer or scientisttype. They take things apart, then move on, like they’re looking for something. They do not, repeat not,appear hostile. Advise that you do not engage. They raise a pretty loud alarm, Blue Lead.” “You in trouble?” “Dodged trouble, sir,”he said.“But there is one snag.” “Snag.” The word was charged with meaning for the Spartans. Getting caught in an ambush or aminefield, a teammate wounded, or aerial bombardments—those were all things they had trained for. Snags were things they didn’t know how to handle. Complications that no one had planned for. “Go ahead,” the Master Chief whispered. “We have survivors. Twenty civilians hid in a cargo ship here. There are several wounded.” The Master Chief mulled this over. It wasn’t his choice to weigh the relative worth of a handful ofcivilian lives versus the possibility of taking out ten thousand Covenant troops with their nuke. Hisorders were specific on this point. They could not set up the nuke if there was civilian population at risk. “New mission objective, Red Team Leader,” the Master Chief said. “Get those civilians to the recoverypoint and evac them back to fleet.” He switched COM channels again, broadcasting to all the teams. “Green Team Leader, you still online?” A pause, then Linda spoke:“Roger.” “Move to the docks and coordinate with Red Team—they have survivors we need to evac. Green Teamleader has strategic control of this mission.” “Understood,”she said.“We’re on our way.” “Affirmative, sir,”Joshua said.“We’ll get it done.” “Blue Team out.” The Master Chief disconnected. It was going to be rough for Green and Red Teams. Those civilians would slow them down—and if theyhad to protect them from Covenant patrols, they’d all get noticed. Blue-Two returned. She opened the COM link and reported in. “There’s access to the building—a ladderand a steel plate welded shut. We can burn through it.” The Master Chief opened up the team COM channel. “We’re going to assume that Red and GreenTeams will remove the civilians from C.te d’Azur. We will proceed as planned.” He paused, then turned to Blue-Two. “Break out the nuke and arm it.” Chapter 21 2120 Hours, July 18, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSCIroquois , military staging area in orbit around Sigma Octanus IV“Ship’s status?” Captain Keyes said as he strode onto the bridge, buttoning his collar. He noticed that therepair stationCradle still obscured their port camera. “And why aren’t we clear of that station yet?” “Sir, all hands are at battle stations,” Lieutenant Dominique replied. “General quarters sounded. Tac datauploaded to your station.” A tactical overview of theIroquois , neighboring vessels, andCradle popped onto Keyes’ personaldisplay screen. “As you can see,” Lieutenant Dominique continued, “wedid clear the station, but they aremoving on the same outbound vector we are. Admiral Stanforth wants them with the fleet.” Captain Keyes took his place in his command chair—“the hot seat,” as it was more colloquially known—and reviewed the data. He nodded with satisfaction. “Looks like the Admiral has something up hissleeve.” He turned to Lieutenant Hall. “Engine status, Lieutenant?” “Engines hot at fifty percent,” she reported. She straightened to her full height, nearly six feet, andlooked Captain Keyes in the eye with something edging near defensiveness. “Sir, the engines took a realbeating in our last engagement. The repairs we’ve made are . . . well, the best we could do without acomplete refit.” “Understood, Lieutenant,” Keyes replied calmly. In truth, Keyes was concerned about the engines, too—but it would do no good to make Hall more uneasy than necessary. The last thing he needed now was toundermine her confidence. “Gunnery officer?” Captain Keyes turned to Lieutenant Hikowa. The petite woman bore moreresemblance to a porcelain doll than to a combat officer, but Keyes knew her delicate appearance wasonly skin deep. She had ice water for blood and nerves of steel. “MAC guns charging,” Lieutenant Hikowa reported. “Sixty-five percent and climbing at two percent perminute.” Everything on theIroquois had slowed down to a crawl. Engine, weapons—even the unwieldyCradlekept pace with them. Captain Keyes sat up straighter. There was no time to spend on self-recriminations. He would have to dothe best he could with what he had. There simply was no other alternative. The lift doors popped open and a young man stepped on deck. He was tall and thin. His dark hair—longer than regulations permitted—had been slicked back. He was disarmingly handsome; Keyesnoticed the female bridge crew pause to look the newcomer over before returning to their tasks. “EnsignLovell reporting for duty, Captain.” He snapped a sharp salute. “Welcome aboard, Ensign Lovell.” Captain Keyes returned his salute, surprised that the unkempt officercould demonstrate such crisp adherence to military protocol. “Man the navigation console, please.” The bridge officers scrutinized the Ensign. It was highly unusual for such a low-ranking officer to pilot acapital ship. “Sir?” Lovell wrinkled his forehead, confused. “Has there been some mistake, sir?” “Youare Ensign Michael Lovell? Recently posted on theArchimedes Remote Sensor Outpost?” “Yes, sir. They pulled me off that duty so quick that I—” “Then man your station, Ensign.” “Yes, sir!” Ensign Lovell sat at the navigation console, took a few seconds to acquaint himself with the controls—then reconfigured them more to his liking. A slight smile tugged at the corner of Keyes’ mouth. He knew that Lovell had more combat experiencethan any Lieutenant on the bridge, and was pleased that the Ensign adapted so quickly to unfamiliarsurroundings. “Show me the fleet’s position and the relative location of the enemy, Ensign,” Keyes ordered. “Aye, sir,” Lovell replied. His hands danced across the controls. A moment later, a system map snappedinto place on the main screen. Dozens of small triangular tactical markers showed Admiral Stanforth’sfleet massing between Sigma Octanus IV and its moon. It was a sound opening position. Fighting inorbit around Sigma Octanus IV would have trapped them in the gravity well—like fighting with yourback to a wall. Keyes studied the display—and frowned. The Admiral had moved the fleet into a tightly packed gridformation. When the Covenant fired their plasma weapons at them, there would be no maneuveringroom. The Covenant was moving in-system quickly. Captain Keyes counted twenty radar signatures. He didn’tlike the odds. “Receiving orders,” Lieutenant Dominique said. “Admiral Stanforth wants theIroquois at this locationASAP.” On the map, a blue triangle pulsed on the corner of the grid formation. “Ensign Lovell, get us there at best speed.” “Aye, sir,” he replied. Captain Keyes fought down a wave of embarrassment; theCradle stardock started to pull ahead oftheIroquois . It took up a position directly over the Admiral’s phalanx formation. The refit stationrotated, presenting its edge to the incoming Covenant fleet to show them the smallest target area. “Rotating and reversing burn,” Ensign Lovell said. TheIroquois spun about and slowed. “Thrusters tostation keeping. We’re locked in position, sir.” “Very good, Ensign. Lieutenant Hikowa, divert as much power as you need to get those MAC gunscharged.” “Aye, sir,” Hikowa replied. “Capacitors charging at maximum rate.” “Captain,” Lieutenant Dominique said. “We’re receiving an encrypted firing solution and countdowntimers from theLeviathan ’s AI.” “Transfer that vector to Lieutenant Hikowa and show me on screen.” A line appeared on the tactical map, connecting theIroquois to one of the incoming Covenant frigates. The firing timer appeared in the corner: twenty-three seconds. “Now show me the entire fleet’s firing solutions, Lieutenant Dominique.” A web of trajectories crossed the map with tiny countdown times next to each. Admiral Stanforth hadthe fleet exchanging fire with the Covenant like a line of Redcoats and colonial militia in theRevolutionary War—tactics that could best be described as bloody . . . or suicidal. What the hell was the Admiral thinking? Keyes studied the displays, trying to divine a method to hiscommanding officer’s madness . . . then he understood. Risky, but—if it worked—brilliant. The fleet’s firing countdowns were roughly timed so that the shots would be staggered into two, maybethree, massive salvos. The first salvo would—hopefully—knock out the Covenant ships’ shields. Thefinal salvo was to be the knockout punch. But it could only work once. After that, the UNSC fleet would be destroyed when the remainingCovenant ships returned fire. TheIroquois and the other ships were stationary targets. He appreciatedthat the Admiral couldn’t get too far from Sigma Octanus IV, but with zero momentum—and no room tomaneuver—there’d be no way to avoid those plasma bolts. “Sound decompression alarms in all nonessential sections, Lieutenant Hall, and then empty them.” “Aye, sir,” she said, and bit her lower lip. “Guns: status on the MACs?” Keyes’ eyes were glued to the firing countdown. Twenty seconds . . . fifteen . . . ten . . . “Sir, MAC weapon systems are hot!” Hikowa announced. “Removing safeties now.” The Covenant ships started to rotate slowly in space—although their momentum continued to carry themon their inbound trajectory toward the UNSC phalanx. Motes of red light collected along the alien ships’ lateral lines. Five seconds. “Transferring firing control to the computer,” Lieutenant Hikowa said. She punched a series of firingcodes into the computer, then locked down the controls. TheIroquois recoiled and spat twin bolts ofthunder toward the enemy. The starboard view screen showed UNSC destroyers and frigates launching their opening salvo. The Covenant fleet fired as well; angry red lances of energy raced though space towards them. “Time until that plasma impacts?” Captain Keyes asked Ensign Lovell. “Twenty-two seconds, sir.” The vacuum between the two opposing forces filled with a hundred lines of fire and smoldering metalthat seemed to tear through the fabric of space. Their trajectories closed on one another, then crossed, and the bolts of fire grew larger on the mainscreen. Lieutenant Dominique said, “Receiving a second set of firing solutions and times. Admiral Stanforth onthe priority channel, sir.” “Put him on, holotank two,” Keyes ordered. Near the main view screen, a small holographic tank—normally reserved for the ship’s AI—winked intooperation. Admiral Stanforth’s ghostly image appeared. “All ships: hold your positions. Divert allengine power to recharge your guns. We’ve got something special cooked up.” His eyes narrowed. “Donot—I repeat, do not—underany circumstance break position or fire before you are ordered to do so. Stanforth out.” The holographic projection of the Admiral snapped out of existence. “Orders, sir?” Ensign Lovell turned in his seat. “You heard the Admiral, Ensign. Thrusters to station keeping. Lieutenant Hikowa: get those gunsrecharged on the double.” “Aye, sir.” Keyes nodded as Hikowa turned back to her task. “Three seconds until first salvo impact,” sheannounced. Keyes turned back to the tac display, concentrating on the MAC rounds that crawled across the screen. The fleet’s MAC rounds hammered into the Covenant lines. Shields flickered silver-blue and overloadedas the super-dense projectiles rammed into the formation; several ships were spun out of position by theimpact. “Guns?” he called out. “Enemy status?” “Multiple hits on Covenant fleet, sir,” Hikowa replied. “Salvo two impact . . . now.” A handful of the shots were clean misses. Keyes winced; each one of the off-trajectory MAC roundsmeant one more enemy ship would survive to return fire. The vast majority, however, slammed into the unshielded alien vessels. The lead Covenant destroyertook a direct hit from a heavy round, which sent the alien ship into a lurching port spin. Keyes saw the destroyer’s engines flare as her pilot struggled to regain control—just as a second MACround struck on the ship’s opposite side. For an instant, the Covenant vessel shuddered, held position,then flexed as the hull stresses became too great. The destroyer disintegrated and scattered debris in awide arc. A second Covenant ship—a frigate—shuddered under the impact of multiple MAC rounds. It listed tostarboard and rammed the next frigate in the enemy formation. Sparks and small explosions flared fromthe ships as a gray-white plume of vented atmosphere exploded into space. The ships’ running lightsflickered, then dimmed as the pair of dead spacecraft—locked in a deadly embrace—tumbled into theheart of the Covenant line. A moment later, the wrecked ships hit a third Covenant frigate, and they exploded, sending tendrils ofplasma through space. A dozen of their ships vented atmosphere and fires flickered within their hulls. The fore view screen, however, was now filled with incoming weapons fire. “Fleet commander on priority channel,” Dominique announced. “Audio only.” “Patch it through, Lieutenant,” Keyes ordered. A hiss of static crackled through the communications-system speakers. A moment later, AdmiralStanforth’s voice calmly broke through the noise. “Lead to all ships: hold your positions,” the Admiralsaid. “Make ready to fire. Transfer timers to your computers . . . and hang on to your hats.” A shadow crossed the overhead camera. On the view screen, Captain Keyes watched as theCradle repairstation, the plate nearly a kilometer on edge, rotated and started to slide in front of their phalanxformation. “Christ,” Ensign Lovell whispered, “they’re going to take the hits for us.” “Dominique, hit the scopes. Are there any lifepods outbound fromCradle ?” Keyes asked. He alreadyknew the answer. “Sir,” Dominique answered, his deep voice thick with worry. “No escape craft have left theCradle .” All eyes on theIroquois ’ bridge were riveted to the screen. Keyes’ hands clenched with anger andhelplessness. There was nothing to do but watch. The front view screen went black as the station passed in front of them. Pinpoints of red and orangeappeared along the back surface, metal vapor venting in plumes.Cradle lurched closer to the fleet, theimpact of the plasma torpedoes pushing it back. The station continued to move downward, spreading outthe damage. Holes appeared in the surface; the internal lattice of steel girders was exposed and, secondslater, glowed white-hot—then the view screen was clear again. “Ventral cameras,” Captain Keyes said. “Now!” The view changed as Dominique switched to theIroquois ’ belly cameras.Cradle station reappeared. Shespun and her entire forward surface was aglow . . . heat spread to the edges, the center liquefied andpulled away. “MAC guns ready to fire in three seconds,” Lieutenant Hikowa announced, her voice cold and angry. “Targeting lock acquired.” Keyes gripped the arms of the command chair. “Cradle’s crew bought this shot for us, Lieutenant,” Captain Keyes growled. “Make it count.” TheIroquois shuddered as the MAC gun fired. On the status display, Keyes watched as the rest of theUNSC fleet fired simultaneously. A twenty-one-gun salute three times over for those on board thestation who had given their lives. “All ships: break and attack!” Admiral Stanforth bellowed. “Pick your targets and fire at will. Take asmany of these bastards out as you can! Stanforth out.” They had to move before the Covenant plasma weapons recharged. “Give me fifty percent on our engines,” Captain Keyes ordered, “and come about to course two eightzero.” “Aye,” Ensign Lovell and Lieutenant Hall replied in unison. “Lieutenant Hikowa, release safeties on the Archer missile system.” “Safeties disengaged, sir.” TheIroquois moved away at a near-right angle from the phalanx formation. The other UNSC shipsscattered at all vectors. One UNSC destroyer, theLancelot , accelerated straight toward the Covenant line. As the UNSC ships scattered, the MAC salvo reached the Covenant ships. The Admiral’s firingsolutions had targeted the remainder of the Covenant battlegroup’s smaller ships. Their shields sparkled,rippled, and then flickered out of existence. Their frigates shattered under the impact of the firepower. Holes ripped through their hulls. Wrecked spacecraft drifted lazily through the battle area. The surprise second salvo had cost the Covenant dearly—a dozen enemy ships were out of the fight. That left eight Covenant vessels—destroyers and cruisers. Pulse lasers and Archer missiles fired, and every ship onscreen accelerated towards one another. BothCovenant and UNSC ships released their single-ship fighters. The tac computer was having trouble tracking everything—Keyes cursed to himself over the lack of aship AI—as the missile fire and plasma discharges strobed in the blackness. Single ships—the humans’ Longsword fighters and the flat, vaguely piscine Covenant fighters—dove, and fired, and impacted intowarships. Archer missiles left trails of exhaust. Blue pulse lasers scattered inside the clouds of ventedpropellant and atmosphere, and cast a ghostly blue glow over the scene. “Orders, sir?” Lovell asked nervously. Captain Keyes paused—something felt . . . wrong. The battle was utter chaos, and it was nearlyimpossible to tell exactly what was happening. Sensor data was thrown off by the constant detonationsand the fire of the aliens’ energy weapons. “Scan near the planet, Lieutenant Hall,” Keyes said. “Ensign Lovell, move us closer to Sigma OctanusFour.” “Sir?” Lieutenant Dominique said. “We’re not engaging the Covenant fleet?” “Negative, Lieutenant.” The bridge crew paused for a fraction of a second—all except Ensign Lovell, who tapped on the controlsand plotted a new course. The bridge crew had all had a taste of being heroes in their last battle, and theywanted more. Captain Keyes knew what that was like . . . and he knew how dangerous it was. He was not about to charge into battle, however, with theIroquois at half power, her structural integrityalready compromised, and with no AI to mount a point defense against Covenant single ships. Oneplasma torpedo to their lower decks would gut them. If he remained where he was and attempted to shoot into the fray, he was just as likely to accidentally hita friendly ship as a Covenant vessel. No. There were several damaged Covenant ships in the area. He would finish them off—make sure theycould not launch any attack on their fleet. There was no glory in the action—but considering theirpresent condition, glory was of little concern. Survival was. Captain Keyes watched the battle rage in the starboard camera. TheLeviathan took a plasma bolt, andher foredecks burned. One Covenant ship collided with the UNSC frigateFair Weather ; thesuperstructures of the two craft locked together—and both ships opened fire at point-blank range. TheFair Weather detonated into a ball of nuclear fire that engulfed the Covenant destroyer. Both shipsfaded from the tactical display. “Covenant ship detected in orbit around Sigma Octanus Four,” Lieutenant Hall reported. “Let me see it,” Keyes said. A small vessel appeared on-screen. It was smaller than the Covenant equivalent of a frigate . . . butdefinitely larger than one of the aliens’ dropships. It was sleek and seemed to waver in and out of theblankness of space. The engine pods were baffled and devoid of the characteristic purple-white glow ofCovenant propulsion systems. “They’re in a geosynchronous orbit over C.te d’Azur,” Lieutenant Hall reported. “Their thrusters arefiring microbursts. Precision station keeping, sir, if I were to guess.” Lieutenant Dominique interrupted. “Detected scattering from a narrow-beam transmission on the planetsurface, sir. A far-infrared laser.” Captain Keyes turned toward the main battle on-screen. Was this slaughter just a diversion? The original attack on Sigma Octanus IV had been for the sole purpose of landing ships and invadingC.te d’Azur. Once accomplished, their battle group had left. And now—whatever the Covenant’s purpose was groundside, they were sending information to thisstealth ship . . . while the rest of their fleet kept the UNSC forces from interfering. “Like hell,” he muttered. “Ensign Lovell, plot a collision course for that ship.” “Aye, sir.” “Lieutenant Hall, push the engines as far as you can. I need every bit of speed you can get me.” “Yes, sir. If we vent primary coolant and use our reserve, I can boost the engine output to sixty-sixpercent . . . for five minutes.” “Do it.” TheIroquois moved sluggishly toward the Covenant ship. “Intercept in twenty seconds,” Lovell said. “Lieutenant Hikowa, arm Archer missile pods A through D. Blow that Covenant son of a bitch out of thesky.” “Archer missile pods armed, sir,” she replied smoothly. Her hands moved gracefully over the controls. “Firing.” Archer missiles streaked toward the Covenant stealth ship—but as they closed with the target, theystarted to swerve from side to side, then spun out of control. The spent missiles fell toward the planet. Lieutenant Hikowa cursed quietly in Japanese. “Missile guidance locks jammed,” she said. “Their ECMspoofed the guidance packages, sir.” No other choice, then,Keyes thought.They can jam our missiles—let’s see them jam this. “Run them over, Ensign Lovell,” Keyes ordered. He licked his lips. “Aye, sir.” “Sound collision alarm,” Captian Keyes said. “All hands, brace for impact.” “She’s moving,” Lovell said. “Keep on her.” “Course correcting now. Hang on,” Lovell said. The eight-thousand-tonIroquois slammed into the tiny Covenant ship. On the bridge, they barely felt the impact. The diminutive alien vessel, however, was crushed from theforce. Her crippled hull spun toward Sigma Octanus IV. “Damage report!” Keyes bellowed. “Lower decks 3 through 8 show hull breach, sir,” Hall called out. “Internal bulkheads were alreadyclosed, and no one was in those areas, per your orders. No systems damage reported.” “Good. Move to her original position, Ensign Lovell. Lieutenant Dominique, I want that transmissionbeam intercepted.” The ventral cameras showed the Covenant ship plunge into the atmosphere. Its shield glowed yellow,then white—then dissipated as the ship’s systems failed. It burst into crimson flame and burned acrossthe horizon, a black plume of smoke trailing in its wake. “TheIroquois is losing altitude,” Ensign Lovell said. “We’re falling into the planet’s atmosphere . . . bringing us about.” TheIroquois spun 180 degrees. The Ensign concentrated on his displays, then said,“No good, we need more power. Sir, permission to fire emergency thrusters?” “Granted.” Lovell exploded the aft emergency thrusters and theIroquois jumped. Lovell’s eyes were locked on therepeater displays as he fought for every centimeter of maneuvering he could get. Sweat ran down hisforehead and soaked his flight suit. “Orbit stabilizing—barely.” Lovell exhaled with relief, then turned to face Keyes. “Got it, sir. Thrustersto precision station keeping.” “Receiving,” Lieutenant Dominique said, and then paused. “Receiving . . . something, sir. It must beencrypted.” “Make sure you’re recording, Lieutenant.” “Affirmative. Recorders active . . . but the codebreaker software can’t crack it, sir.” Captain Keyes turned back to the tac displays, half expecting to see a Covenant ship in firing position. There wasn’t much left of either the Covenant or UNSC fleets. Dozens of ships drifted in space,billowing atmosphere and burning. The rest moved slowly. A few flickered with fire. Scatteredexplosions dotted the black. One undamaged Covenant destroyer turned, however, and left the battlefield. It came about and headedstraight for theIroquois . “Uh-oh,” Lovell muttered. “Lieutenant Hall, get me theLeviathan —priority Alpha channel,” Keyes ordered. “Yes, sir,” she said. Admiral Stanforth’s image appeared in the holotank. His forehead had a gash across it, and bloodtrickled into his eyes. He wiped it away with a shaking hand, his eyes blazing with anger. “Keyes? Where the hell isIroquois ?” “Sir,Iroquois is in geosynchronous orbit over C.te d’Azur. We’ve destroyed a Covenant stealth ship andare in the process of intercepting a secure transmission from the planet.” The Admiral stared at him a moment unbelievingly, then nodded as if this made sense to him. “Proceed.” “We have a Covenant destroyer leaving the battle . . . bearing down on us. I think the reason for theCovenant’s invasion may be in this coded transmission. And they don’t want us to know, sir.” “Understood, son. Hang on. The Cavalry’s on its way.” On the aft screen, the remaining eight UNSC ships broke their attacks and turned toward the incomingdestroyer. Three MAC guns fired and impacted on the Covenant vessel. Its shields only lapsed for a splitsecond; it took a round through her nose . . . but it continued toward theIroquois at flank speed. “Transmission ended, sir,” Lieutenant Dominique announced. “Cut off in midpacket. The signal wasterminated at the source.” “Damn.” Captain Keyes considered staying and trying to reacquire that signal—but only for a moment. He decide to take what they had and run with it. “Ensign Lovell, get us the hell out of here.” “Sir!” Lieutenant Hall said. “Look.” The Covenant destroyer was changing course . . . along with the rest of the surviving Covenant vessels. They were scattering, and accelerating out of the system. “They’re running,” Lieutenant Hikowa said, her normal iron calm replaced by astonishment. Within minutes, the Covenant ships accelerated and vanished into Slipstream space. Captain Keyes looked aft and counted only seven UNSC ships intact, with the balance of the fleetdestroyed or disabled. He sat in his command chair. “Ensign Lovell, take us back the way we came. Make ready to take onwounded. Repressurize all uncompromised decks.” “Jesus,” Lieutenant Hall said. “I think we actually . . . won that one.” “Yes, Lieutenant. We won,” Keyes replied. But Captain Keyes wondered exactly what they had won. The Covenant had come to this system for areason—and he had a sinking feeling that they may have gotten what they had come for. Chapter 22 2010 Hours, July 18, 2552 (Military Calendar) /Sigma Octanus IV, C.te d’AzurIt was time to arm the nuke. The small device held the power to destroy C.te d’Azur—wipe the Covenant infection clean off theplanet. John carefully removed the bonding strips on the HAVOK tactical nuclear device and attached it to thewall of the sewer. The adhesive on the black half sphere stuck and hardened to the concrete. He slippedthe detonator key into a thin slot on the unit’s face. There were no external indicators on the device;instead, a tiny screen winked on his heads-up display indicating the nuke was armed. HAVOK ARMED, flashed across his HUD. AWAITING DETONATION SIGNAL. The device—a clean thirty-megaton explosive—could only be detonated by a remote signal . . . aproblem here in the sewers. Even the powerful communications package on a starship would be unableto penetrate the steel and concrete overhead. John quickly rigged a ground-return transceiver, placing it on the pipes overhead. He’d have to set upanother unit outside to relay the signal underground . . . a hot line that would trigger a nuclear firestorm. Technically, his mission parameters had been fulfilled. Green and Red Teams would have the civiliansevacuated soon. They had scouted the region and discovered a new Covenant species—the strangefloating creature that disassembled and reassembled human machinery, like a scientist or engineerstripping down a device to learn its secrets. He could leave and destroy the Covenant occupation force. Heshould leave—there was an army ofJackals and Grunts—including at least a platoon of the black-armored veterans—on the streets above. There were three medium Covenant dropships hovering in the air as well. The advance Marine strikeforces had been slaughtered, leaving the Spartans no backup. His responsibility now was to make surehis team got out intact. But John’s orders had an unusual amount of flexibility . . . and that made him uncomfortable. He hadbeen told to reconnoiter the region and gather intelligence on the Covenant. He was positive there wasmore to be learned here. Certainly they were up to something in C.te d’Azur’s museum. The Covenant had never before beeninterested in human history—or indeed, in humans or their artifacts of any kind. He had seen a disarmedJackal fight hand to hand rather than pick up a nearby human assault rifle. And the only thing theCovenant had ever used human buildings for was target practice. So finding out the reason they seized and were protecting the museum definitely qualified as intelligencegathering in his book. Was it worth exposing his team to find out? And if they died, would he be wasting their lives . . . orspending them for something worthwhile? “Master Chief?” Kelly whispered. “Our orders, sir?” He opened Blue Team’s COM channel. “We’re going in. Use your silencers. Don’t engage the enemyunless absolutely necessary. This place is too hot. We’ll just poke our noses in—see what they’re up toand bug out.” Three acknowledgment lights winked on. The Master Chief knew they implicitly trusted his judgment. He just hoped he was worthy of that trust. The Spartans checked their gear and threaded silencers onto their assault rifles. They slipped silentlydown a wide side passage of the sewer. A rusty ladder ran up to the ceiling, and a steel plate had been welded in place. “Thermite paste already set up,” Fred reported. “Burn it.” The Master Chief stepped to the side and looked away. The thermite sputtered as bright as an electric arc welder, casting harsh shadows into the chamber. Whenit finished there was a jagged, glowing red circle in the steel. The Master Chief climbed up the ladder and put his back against the plate—pushed. It popped free witha metallicsnap . He eased the plate down and set it aside. He attached the fiber-optic probe, fed it up through the hole. All clear. He flexed his leg muscles and sent the MJOLNIR armor up through the hole, pulling himself into thenext chamber with his left hand. His right hand held the silenced assault rifle as if it were no heavierthan a pistol. He braced for incoming enemy fire——Nothing happened. He moved forward and surveyed the small room. The stone-walled chamber was dark, and was linedwith shelving units. Each unit held jars filled with clear liquid and insect specimens. Boxes and crateswere stacked neatly on the floor. Kelly entered next, then Fred and James. “Picking up motion sensor signals,”Kelly said over the COM channel. “Jam them.” “Done,”she replied.“They may have gotten a piece of us, though.” “Spread out,” the Master Chief ordered. “Get ready to jump back into the hole if this gets too hot. Otherwise, initiate the standard distract-and-destroy.” The clatter of alien hooves on marble echoed behind a door to their right. The Spartans melted into the shadows. The Master Chief crouched behind a crate and unsheathed hiscombat knife. The door opened and four Jackals stood in the door frame; they held active energy shields in front ofthem—warping their already ugly vulture faces. The blue-white glow of the energy shield pulsedthrough the dark chamber.Good, the Master Chief thought.That should play hell with their night vision. The Jackals held plasma pistols at the ready in their free hands; the barrels of the guns moved erraticallyas the aliens whispered to one another . . . then steadied as, in careful, slow movements, they moved in. The aliens fanned out into a rough “delta” formation—the lead Jackal a meter ahead of his compatriots. The group approached the Master Chief’s hiding spot. There was a slight noise: the clink of glass bottles on the other side of the room. The Jackals turned . . . and presented their unshielded backs to the Master Chief. He exploded from his hiding place and jammed his blade into the base of the closest Jackal’s back. Hesnapped his right foot out, caught the back of the next Jackal’s head, crushing its skull. The remaining aliens spun, glistening energy shields interposed between them and him. There were three coughs from silenced MA5Bs. Alien blood—black in the harsh blue-white light—spattered across the inner surfaces of the energy shields as the silenced rounds found their marks. TheJackals toppled to the ground. The Master Chief policed their plasma pistols and retrieved the shield generators clamped on theirforearms. He had standing orders to collect intact specimens of Covenant technology. The Office ofNaval Intelligence had not been able to replicate the Covenant’s shield technology. But they weregetting close. In the meantime, the Spartans would use these. The Master Chief strapped the curved piece of metal to his forearm. He touched one of the two largebuttons on the unit and a scintillating film appeared before him. He handed the other shield devices to his teammates. He pressed the second button and the shield collapsed. “Don’t use these unless you have to,” he said. “The humming and their reflective surfaces might give usaway . . . and we don’t know how long they last.” He got three acknowledgment lights. Kelly and Fred took up positions on either side of the open door. She gave him a thumbs-up. Kelly took point and the Spartans moved, single file, up a circular stairwell. She paused a full ten seconds at the doorway to the main floor. She waved them ahead and they emergedon the main level of the museum. The skeleton of a blue whale was suspended over the main foyer. The dead hulk reminded the MasterChief of a Covenant starship. He turned away from the distraction and slowly moved over the blackmarble tiles. Oddly, there were no more Jackal patrols. There were a hundred Jackals outside guarding the place . . . but none inside. The Master Chief didn’t like it. It didn’t feel right . . . and Chief Mendez had told him a thousand timesto trust his instincts. Was it a trap? The Spartans staggered their line and moved cautiously into the east wing. There were displays of thelocal flora and fauna: gigantic flowers and fist-sized beetles. But their motion sensors were cold. Fred halted . . . and then, with a quick hand signal, waved John to move up to his position. He stood by a case of pinned butterflies. On the floor, facedown in front of that case, was a Jackal. Itwas dead, crushed flat. There was an imprint of a large boot where the creature’s back had been. Whatever had done this had easily weighed a ton. The Master Chief spotted a few blood-smeared prints leading away from the Jackal . . . and into the westwing. He flipped on his infrared sensors and took a long look around—no heat sources here or in the nearbyrooms. The Master Chief followed the footprints and signaled the team to follow. The west wing held scientific displays. There were static electric generators and quantum fieldholograms on the walls, a tapestry of darting arrows and wriggling lines. A cloud chamber sat in thecorner with subatomic tracers zipping through its misty confines—the Master Chief noted it wasunusually active. This place reminded him of Déjà’s classroom on Reach. A branch opened to another wing. The word GEOLOGY was carved on the entry arch. Through that arch there was a strong infrared source, a razor-thin line that shot straight up and out of thebuilding. The Master Chief only caught a glimpse of the thing—a wink and a blink then it was goneagain . . . it was so bright his IR sensors overloaded and automatically shut down. He waved James to take the left side of the arch. He had Kelly and Fred drop back to cover their flanks,and the Master Chief edged to the right of the arch. He sent a fiber-optic probe ahead, bent it slightly, and poked it around the corner. The room contained display cases of mineral specimens. There were sulfur crystals, raw emeralds, andrubies. There was a monolith of unpolished pink quartz in the center of the room, three meters wide andsix tall. Off to one side, however, were two creatures. The Master Chief hadn’t seen them at first—because theywere so motionless . . . and so massive. He had no doubt that one of them had crushed the Jackal thathad gotten in its way. The Master Chief got scared all the time. He never showed it, though. He usually mentallyacknowledged the apprehension, put it aside, and continued . . . just as he’d been trained to do. Thistime, however, he couldn’t easily dismiss the feeling. The two creatures were vaguely man-shaped. They stood two and a half meters tall. It was difficult tomake out their features; they were covered from head to toe with a dull blue-gray armor, similar to thehull of a Covenant ship. Blue, orange, and yellow highlights were visible on the few patches of exposedskin the creatures sported. They had slits where their eyes should be. The articulation points lookedimpregnable. On their left arms they hefted large shields, thick as starship battleplate. Mounted on their right armswere massive, wide-barreled weapons, so large that the arm beneath seemed to blend into the weapon. They moved with slow deliberation. One took a rock from the display case and set it inside a red metalcase. It bent over the case while the other turned and touched the control panel of a device that lookedlike a small pulse laser turret. The laser pointed straight up—and out through the shattered glass domeoverhead. That had been the source of the infrared radiation. The laser must have intermittently scattered off thedust in the air—flashed enough energy into his sensors to burn them out. Something that powerful couldbeam a message straight out into space. The Master Chief made a slow fist—the signal for his team to freeze. Then, with slow, deliberatemovements, he signaled the Spartans to stay alert and get ready. He waved Fred and Kelly forward. Fred crept closer to him. Kelly slid up next to James. The Master Chief then held up two fingers and made a sideways cut, motioning them into the room. Acknowledgment lights winked on. He went in first, sidestepped to the right, with Fred at his side. James and Kelly took the left flank. They opened fire. Armor-piercing rounds pinged off the aliens’ body armor. One of them turned and brought its shield infront of it—covering its partner, the red case, and the laser beacon. The Spartan bullets didn’t even leave a scratch on the armor. The alien raised its arm slightly and pointed at Kelly and James. A flash of light blinded the Master Chief. There was a deafening explosion and a wave of heat. Heblinked for a full three seconds before he recovered his vision. Where Kelly and James had been there was a burning crater that fanned backward . . . nothing butcharcoal and ash remained of the Science Chamber behind them. Kelly had moved in time; she crouched five meters deeper into the room, still firing. James was nowhereto be seen. The other massive creature turned to face the Master Chief. He hit the button on the shield generator on his arm and brought it up just in time—the nearest alien’sweapon flashed again. The air in front of the Master Chief shimmered and exploded—he flew backward, crashing through thewall, and skidded for ten meters before slamming into the wall of the next room. The Jackal shield generator was white-hot. The Master Chief ripped the melted alien device off andthrew it away. Those plasma bolts were like nothing he had seen before. They seemed almost as powerful as thestationary plasma cannons the Jackals used. The Master Chief sprang to his feet and charged back into the chamber. If the aliens’ weapons were similar to Covenant plasma guns, they would need to be recharged. Hehoped the Spartans had enough time to take those things out. The Master Chief still felt the fear—it was stronger than it had been before . . . but his team was still inthere. He had to take care of them first before he could indulge in the luxury of feelings. Kelly and Fred circled the creatures, their silenced weapons firing quick bursts. They ran out ofammunition and switched clips. This wasn’t working. They couldn’t take them out. Maybe a Jackhammer missile at point-blank rangewould penetrate their armor. The Master Chief’s gaze was drawn to the center of the room. He stared for a moment at the monolith ofpink quartz. Over the COM channel he ordered, “Switch to shredder rounds.” He changed ammunition and thenopened fire—at the floor underneath the enormous creatures’ feet. Kelly and Fred changed rounds and fired, too. Marble tiles shattered and the wood underneath splintered into toothpicks. One of the creatures raised its arm again, preparing to fire. “Keep shooting,” John yelled. The floor creaked, buckled, and then fell away; the two massive aliens plunged into the basement below. “Quick,” the Master Chief said. He slung his rifle and moved to the back of the quartz monolith. “Push!” Kelly and Fred leaned their weight against the stone and grunted with effort. The slab moved a tiny bit. James sprinted forward, slammed into the stone, put his shoulder alongside theirs . . . andpushed . Hisleft arm had been burned away from the elbow down, but he didn’t even whimper. The monolith moved; it inched toward the hole . . . then tilted and went over. It landed with a dull thudand a crunching noise. The Master Chief peered over the edge. He saw an armored left leg, and on the other side of the stoneslab, an arm struggling underneath. The things were still alive. Their motions slowed, but they didn’tcease. The red case was balanced precariously on the edge the hole. It teetered—no way to reach it in time. He turned to Kelly—the fastest Spartan—and yelled: “Grab it!” The box fell——and Kelly leaped. In a single bound, she caught the rock as the case dropped, she tucked, rolled, and got to her feet, therock safely held in one hand. She handed it to the Master Chief. The rock was a piece of granite and glittered with a few jewel-like inclusions. What was as so specialabout it? He stuffed it into his ammunition sack and then kicked over the Covenant transmission beacon. Outside, the Master Chief heard the clattering and squawking of the army of Jackals and Grunts. “Let’s get out of here, Spartans.” He threw his arm around James and helped him along. They ran into the basement, making sure to givethe pinned giants under the stone a wide berth, then jumped through the storm drain and into the sewers. They jogged thought the muck and didn’t stop until they had cleared the drain system and emerged inthe rice paddies on the edge of C.te d’Azur. Fred rigged the ground-return relay to the pipes overhead and ran a crude antenna outside. The Master Chief looked back at the city. Banshee fliers circled through the skyscrapers. Spotlights fromthe hovering Covenant transport ships bathed the streets in blue illumination. The Grunts were goingcrazy; their barks and screams rose to an impenetrable din. The Spartans moved toward the coast and followed the tree line south. James collapsed twice along theway and then finally slipped into unconsciousness. The Master Chief slung him over him shoulder andcarried him. They paused and hid when they heard a patrol of a dozen Grunts. The aliens ran past them—they eitherdidn’t see the Spartans, or they didn’t care. The animals sprinted as fast as they could back to the city. When they were a click away from the rendezvous point, the Master Chief opened the COM link. “Green Team Leader, we’re on your perimeter, and coming in. Signaling with blue smoke.” “Ready and waiting for you, sir,”Linda replied.“Welcome back.” The Master Chief set off one of his smoke grenades and they marched into the clearing. The Pelican was intact. Corporal Harland and his Marines stood post, and the rescued civilians weresafely inside the ship. Blue and Red Teams were hidden in the nearby brush and trees. Linda approached them. She motioned for her team to take James and get him onto the Pelican. “Sir,” she said. “All civilians on board and ready for liftoff.” The Master Chief wanted to relax, sit down, and close his eyes. But this was often the most dangerouspart of any mission . . . those last few steps when you might let down your guard. “Good. Take one more look around the perimeter. Let’s make double sure nothing followed us back.” “Yes, sir.” Corporal Harland approached and saluted. “Sir? How did you do it? Those civilians said you got themout of the city—past an army of Covenant, sir. How?” John cocked his head quizzically. “It was our mission, Corporal,” he said. The Corporal stared at him and then at the other Spartans. “Yes, sir.” When Green Team Leader reported that the perimeter was clear, the last of the Spartans boarded thePelican. James had regained consciousness. Someone had removed his helmet and propped his head on a foldedsurvival blanket. His eyes watered from the pain, but he managed to salute the Master Chief with his lefthand. John gestured at Kelly; she administered a dose of painkiller, and James lapsed intounconsciousness. The Pelican lifted into the air. In the distance, the suns were warming the horizon, and C.te d’Azur wasoutlined against the dawn. The dropship suddenly accelerated at full speed straight up, and then angled away to the south. “Sir,”the pilot said over the COM channel.“We’re getting multiple incoming radar contacts . . . abouttwo hundred Banshees inbound.” “We’ll take care of it, Lieutenant,” John replied. “Prepare for EMP and shock wave.” The Master Chief activated his remote radio transceiver. He quickly keyed in the final fail-safe code, then sent the coded burst transmission on its way. A third sun appeared on the horizon. It blotted out the light of the system’s stars, then cooled—fromamber to red—and darkened the sky with black clouds of dust. “Mission accomplished,” he said. Chapter 23 0500 Hours, July 18, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSCIroquois , military staging area in orbit around Sigma Octanus IVCaptain Keyes leaned against the brass railing on the bridge of theIroquois and surveyed the devastation. The space near Sigma Octanus IV was littered with debris: the dead hulks of Covenant and UNSC shipsspun lazily in the vacuum, surrounded by clouds of wreckage: jagged pieces of decimated armor plate,shattered single-ship fuselages, and heat-blackened metal fragments created a million radar targets. Thedebris field would clutter this system and make for a navigational hazard for the next decade. They had recovered nearly all the bodies from space. Captain Keyes’ gaze caught the remnants of theCradle as the blasted space dock spun past. Thekilometer-wide plate was now safely locked in a high orbit around the planet. She was slowly being tornapart from her own rotation; girders and metal plates warped and bent as the gravitational stresses on theship increased. The Covenant plasma weapons had burned through ten decks of super-hard metal and armor like somany layers of tissue paper. Thirty volunteers on the repair station had died piloting the unwieldy craft. Admiral Stanforth had gotten his “win” . . . but at a tremendous cost. Keyes brought up the casualty figures and damage estimates on his data pad. He scowled as the datascrolled across his screen. The UNSC had lost more than twenty ships, and those that survived had all suffered heavy damage;most would require months of time-consuming repair at a shipyard. Nearly one thousand people werekilled in the battle, and hundreds more were wounded, many critically. Add to that the sixteen hundredMarine casualties on the surface—and the three hundred thousand civilians murdered in C.te d’Azur atthe hands of the Covenant. Some “win,” Keyes thought bitterly. C.te d’Azur was now a smoldering crater—but Sigma Octanus IV was still a human-held world. Theyhad saved everyone else on the planet, nearly thirteen million souls. So perhaps it had been worth it. So many lives and deaths had been measured in this battle. Had the balance of the odds tipped slightlyagainst them—everything could have been lost. That was something he had never taught any of hisstudents at the Academy—how much victory depended on luck as well as skill. Captain Keyes saw the last of the Marine dropships returning from the planet surface. They docked withtheLeviathan , and then the huge carrier turned and accelerated out of the system. “Sensor sweep complete,” Lieutenant Dominique reported. “I think that was the last of the lifeboats wepicked up, sir.” “Let’s make certain, Lieutenant,” Keyes replied. “One more pass through the system please. EnsignLovell, plot a course and take us around again.” “Yes, sir,” Lovell wearily replied. The bridge crew was exhausted, physically and emotionally. They had all pulled extended shifts as theysearched for survivors. Captain Keyes would rotate shifts after this next pass. As he looked at this crew he noticed that something was different. Lieutenant Hikowa’s movementswere crisp and determined, as if everything she did now would decide their next battle; it made astartling contrast to her normally lethargic efficiency. Lieutenant Hall’s false exuberance had beenreplaced by genuine confidence. Dominique almost seemed happy—his hands lightly typing a report toFLEET- COM. Even Ensign Lovell, despite his exhaustion, stepped lively. Maybe Admiral Stanforth was right. Maybe the fleet needed this win more than he had realized. They had beaten the Covenant. Although not widely known, there had been only three smallengagements in which the UNSC fleet had decisively defeated the Covenant. And not since AdmiralCole had retaken Harvest colony had there been an engagement on this scale. A complete victory—aworld saved. It would show everyone that winning was possible, that there was hope. But, he mused, was there really? They won because they had gotten lucky—and had twice as many shipsas the Covenant. And, he suspected, they had beaten the Covenant because the Covenant’s real objectivehadn’t been to win. Naval Intelligence officers had come aboard theIroquois immediately after the battle. Theycongratulated Captain Keyes on his performance . . . and then copied and purged every single bit of datathey had intercepted from the Covenant planetside transmission. Of course, the ONI spooks left without offering any explanation. Keyes toyed with his pipe, replaying the battle in his mind. No. The Covenant had lost because theywere really after something else on Sigma Octanus IV—and the intercepted message was the key. “Sir,” Lieutenant Dominique said. “Incoming orders from FLEETCOM.” “Put it through to my station, Lieutenant,” Captain Keyes said as he sat in his command chair. Thecomputer scanned his retina and fingerprints and then decoded the message. He read on the smallmonitor: United Nations Space Command Priority Transmission 09872H-98Encryption Code:RedPublic Key:file /lightning-matrix-four/From:Admiral Michael Stanforth, Commanding Officer, UNSCLeviathan / USNC Sector ThreeCommander/ (UNSC Service Number: 00834-19223-HS)To:Captain Jacob Keyes, Commanding officer UNSCIroquois / (UNSC Service Number: 01928-19912-JK)Subject:ORDERS FOR YOUR IMMEDIATE CONSIDERATIONClassification:SECRET (BGX Directive)/start file/Keyes,drop whatever you’re doing and head back to the barn. We’re both wanted for immediate debriefing byONI at REACH Headquarters ASAP. Looks like the spooks at Naval Intelligence are up to their normal cloak-and-dagger tricks. Cigars and brandy afterward. Regards,Stanforth“Very well,” he muttered to himself. “Lieutenant Dominique: send Admiral Stanforth my compliments. Ensign Lovell, generate a randomized vector as per the Cole Protocol, and make ready to leave system. Take us out for an hour in Slipstream space, then we’ll reorient and proceed to the REACH MilitaryInstillation.” “Aye, sir. Randomized jump vector ready—our tracks are covered.” “Lieutenant Hall: start organizing shore leave for the crew. We’re heading back for repairs and somewell-deserved R and R.” “Amen to that,” Ensign Lovell said. That wasn’t technically in his orders, but Captain Keyes would make sure his crew got the rest theydeserved. That was the least he could do for them. TheIroquois slowly accelerated on an out-system vector. Captain Keyes took one long last look at Sigma Octanus IV. The battle was over . . . so why did he feellike he was headed into another fight? TheIroquois plowed through a haze of titanium dust—condensed from a UNSC battleplate vaporized byCovenant plasma. The fine particles caught the light from Sigma Octanus and sparkled red and orange,making it look like the destroyer sailed through an ocean of blood. When there was time, a HazMat team would sweep the area and clean up. In the meantime, junk—ranging in size from microscopic up to thirty-meter sections ofCradle —still drifted in the system. One piece of debris in particular floated near theIroquois . It was small, almost indistinguishable from any of a thousand other softball-sized blobs that clutteredradar scopes and polluted thermal sensors. If anyone had been looking close enough, however, they would have seen that this particular piece ofmetal drifted in the opposite direction from all the other masses nearby. It trailed behind theacceleratingIroquois . . . and edged closer, moving with purpose. When it was close enough, it extended tiny electromagnets that guided it to the baffles at the base oftheIroquois ’ number-three engine shield. It blended in perfectly with the other vanadium steelcomponents. The object opened a single photo eye and gazed at the stars, collecting data to reference its currentposition. It would continue to do this for several days. During that time it would slowly build up acharge. When it reached critical energy, a tiny sliver of thallium nitride memory crystal would be ejectedat nearly the speed of light, and a minute Slipstream field would generate around it. If its trajectory wasperfect, it would intercept a Covenant receiver located at precise coordinates in the alternate space. . . . and the tiny automated probe would reveal to the Covenant every place theIroquois had been. Chapter 24 1100 Hours, August 12, 2552 (Military Calendar) /Epsilon Eridani System, Reach UNSC Military Complex, planet Reach, Camp HathcockThe Master Chief steered the Warthog to the fortified gate and ignored the barrel of the chain-gun thatwas not quite pointed in his direction. The guard on duty, a Marine Corporal, saluted smartly when Johnhanded over his identification card. “Sir! Welcome to Camp Hathcock,” the Corporal said. “Follow this road to the inner guardpost andpresent your credentials there. They’ll direct you to the main compound.” John nodded. The Warthog’s tires crunched on gravel as the massive metal gate swung open. Nestled in the Highland Mountains of Reach’s northern continent, Camp Hathcock was a top-levelretreat; heads of state, VIPs, and top brass were the facility’s normal occupants—these and a division ofveteran, battle-hardened Marines. “Sir, please follow the Blue Road to this point here,” the Corporal at the inner gate instructed, gesturingat a point on a wall-mounted map, “and park in the Visitors’ Parking area.” Minutes later, the main facility was in sight. John parked the Warthog and strode across the pleasantlyfamiliar compound. He and the other Spartans had covertly made their way up here during their training. John suppressed a smile as he remembered how many times the young Spartans had commandeeredfood and supplies from the base. He inhaled deeply, smelling pi.on pines and sage. He missed thisplace. He had been away from REACH for far too long. Reach was one of the few places that John considered “safe” from the Covenant. There were a hundredships and twenty Mark V MAC guns on the orbital stations overhead. Those guns were powered byfusion generators, buried deep within REACH. Each Mark V could propel a projectile so massive, andwith such velocity, he doubted if even Covenant shields could withstand a single salvo from them. His home would not fall. Tall fences and razor wire encircled the inner compound of Camp Hathcock. The Master Chief stoppedat the inner gate and saluted the MP there. The Marine MP looked over the Master Chief in his dress uniform. He snapped to attention—his mouthdropped open and he stared unblinkingly. “They’re waiting for you, Master Chief, sir. Please go right onin.” The guard’s reaction to the Master Chief—and the medals on his chest—was not uncommon. First word of the Spartans and their accomplishments had spread despite the cloak of secrecy ONI hadtried to surround them with. Three years ago the information had gone public at Admiral Stanforth’sinsistence—for morale purposes. It was hard to mistake the Master Chief for anything other than a Spartan. He stood just over two meterstall and weighed in at 130 kilos of rock-hard muscle and iron-dense bone. There was a special insignia on his uniformed as well: a golden eagle poised with its talons forward—ready to strike. The bird clutched a lightning bolt in one talon and three arrows in the other. The Spartan insignia was not the only thing about his dress uniform that called attention to him. Campaign ribbons and medals covered the left side. Chief Mendez would have been proud of him, butJohn had long ago stopped keeping track of the honors that had been heaped upon him. He didn’t like the flashy ornamentation. He and the other Spartans preferred to be inside their MJOLNIRarmor. Without it, he felt exposed somehow, like he’d left his quarters without his skin. He had grownused to the enhanced speed and strength, to his thought and actions melding instantaneously. The Master Chief marched into the main building. Outwardly, it had been designed to look like a simplelog cabin, albeit a large one. Its inner walls were lined with Titanium-A armor plate, and undergroundwere bunkers and plush conference rooms that extended a hundred meters below the earth and into themountain of rock. He rode the elevator to Subbasement III. There, he was instructed by the Military Police attendant towait in the debriefing lounge for the committee to summon him. Corporal Harland sat in the lounge, reading a copy ofSTARS magazine, nervously tapping his foot. Heimmediately stood and saluted as the Master Chief entered the room. “At ease, Corporal,” the Master Chief said. He glanced disapprovingly at the thickly padded couchesand decided to stand. The Corporal stared at the Master Chief’s uniform, nervous. Finally he straightened and said, “May I askyou a question, sir?” The Master Chief nodded. “How do you get to be a Spartan? I mean—” His gaze fell to the floor. “I mean, if someone wanted tojoin your outfit. How would they do that?” Join? The Master Chief pondered the word. How hadhe joined? Dr. Halsey had picked him and the otherSpartans twenty-five years ago. It had been an honor . . . but he had never actuallyjoined . In fact, he hadnever seen any other Spartans other than his class. Once, shortly after he’d “graduated” from thetraining, he had overheard Dr. Halsey mention that Chief Mendez was training another group ofSpartans. He had never seen them—or the Chief. “You don’t join,” he finally told the Corporal. “You are selected.” “I see,” Corporal Harland said, and wrinkled his brow. “Well, sir, if anyone ever asks, tell them to signme up.” The Military Police attendant appeared. “Corporal Harland? They’re ready for you now.” A set ofdouble doors opened on the far wall. Harland gave John another salute, and nodded. As the Corporal got up and strode toward the doors, he passed an older man on his way out. He wore theuniform of a UNSC Naval officer, a Captain. John sized the man up quickly—polished shoulderinsignia, new material. The man was a newly ordained Captain. John stood at attention and snapped a precision salute. “Officer on the deck,” John barked. The Captain paused, and looked John up and down. There was a glint of amusement in his eyes as hereturned the salute. “As you were, Master Chief.” John stood at ease. The Captain’s name—Keyes, J.—was embroidered on the dress-gray tunic. Johnrecognized the name immediately: Captain Keyes, the hero of Sigma Octanus.At least, he thought,one ofthe surviving heroes. Keyes glanced at the Master Chief’s uniform. His eyes lingered on the Spartan insignia, and then on theMaster Chief’s serial-number tag just under the stripes of his rank emblem. A faint smile appeared onthe Captain’s face. “It’s good to see you again, Chief.” “Sir?” The Master Chief had never met Captain Keyes. He had heard of his tactical brilliance at SigmaOctanus, but he had never met the man face-to-face. “We met a very long time ago. Dr. Halsey and I—” He stopped. “Hell. I’m not allowed to talk about it.” “Of course, sir. I understand.” The Military Police attendant appeared in the hallway. “Captain Keyes, you’re wanted topside byAdmiral Stanforth.” The Captain nodded to the attendant. “In a moment,” he said. He stepped closer to the Master Chief andwhispered, “Be careful in there. The ONI brass are—” He searched for the right word. “—irritated bythe end results of our encounter with the Covenant at Sigma Octanus. I’d keep my head down in there.” He glanced back toward the debriefing-chamber doors. “Irritated, sir?” John asked, genuinely puzzled. He would have thought the UNSC top brass would beelated by the victory, despite its cost. “But we won.” Captain Keyes took a step back and cocked a quizzical eyebrow. “Didn’t Dr. Halsey ever teach you thatwinning isn’t everything, Master Chief?” He saluted. “You’ll excuse me.” John saluted. He was so confused by Captain Keyes’ statement that he kept saluting as the Captainwalked out of the room. Winningwas everything. How could someone with Captain Keyes’ reputation think otherwise? The Master Chief tried to recall if he had ever read anything like that in any military history orphilosophy texts. What else was there other than winning? The only other obvious choice was losing . . . and he had long been taught that defeat was an unacceptable alternative. Certainly, Captain Keyes didn’tmean that they should havelost at Sigma Octanus? Unthinkable. He stood silently for ten minutes mulling this over. Finally the Military Police attendant entered thewaiting room. “They’re ready for you now, sir.” The double doors opened and Corporal Harland came out. The young man’s eyes were glazed and hetrembled slightly. He looked worse than he had looked when the Master Chief had found him on SigmaOctanus IV. The Master Chief gave a curt nod to the Corporal and then entered the debriefing chamber. The doorsclosed behind him. His eyes instantly adjusted to the dark room. A large, curved desk dominated the far end of therectangular room. A domed ceiling curved over his head, cameras, microphone, and speakers positionedlike constellations. A spotlight snapped on and tracked the Master Chief as he approached the desk. A dozen men and women in Navy uniforms sat in the shadows. Even with his enhanced eyesight, theMaster Chief could barely make out their scowling features and the glistening brass oak leaves and starsthrough the glare of the overhead light. He stood at attention and saluted. The debriefing panel ignored the Master Chief and spoke among themselves. “The transmission that Keyes intercepted only makes sense translated this way,” a man in the shadowssaid. A holotank hummed into operation. Tiny geometric symbols danced in the air above it: squares,triangles, bars, and dots. To the Master Chief, they looked like either Morse code or ancient Aztec hieroglyphics. “I will concede that point,” a woman’s voice in the darkness replied. “But translation software comes upempty. It’s not a new Covenant dialect that we’ve discovered.” “Or a Covenant dialect at all,” someone else said. Finally one of the officers deigned to notice the Master Chief. “At ease, soldier,” he said. The Master Chief let his arm fall. “Spartan 117, reporting as ordered, sirs.” There was a pause, then the woman’s voice spoke up, “We would like to congratulate you on yoursuccessful mission, Master Chief. You’ve certainly given us plenty to consider. We would like to pindown a few details of your mission.” There was something in her voice that made John nervous. Not scared. But it was the same feeling hehad going into combat. The same feeling he got when bullets started flying. “Youdo know, Master Chief,” the first male voice said, “that not answering truthfully—or omitting anyrelevant details will lead to a court-martial?” John bristled. As if he could ever forget his duty. “I will answer to the best of my abilities, sir,” hereplied stiffly. The holotank hummed again and images from a Spartan helmet recorder sprang into view. John notedthe camera ID—it was his own. The images blurred forward, then stopped. A three-dimensional imageof the floating creatures he had seen in C.te d’Azur hung in the air, motionless. “Playback, loop bookmarks one through nine, please,” the woman’s voice called out. Instantly, the holographic image animated—the alien quickly took apart and then reassembled a car’selectric motor. “This creature,” she continued. “During the mission, did you see any other Covenant species—Grunts orJackals—interact with them?” “No, ma’am. As far as I could see, they were left alone.” “And this one,” she said. The image changed to his firefight with the gigantic armored aliens. “At anytime did you see these things interact with the other Covenant species?” “No, ma’am—” The Master Chief reconsidered. “Well, in a manner of speaking, yes. If you couldreview the recording at time minus two minutes from this frame, please.” The holo paused and then blurred backward. “There,” he said. The video played forward as the Master Chief and Fred examined the crushed Jackal inthe museum. “That impression in this Jackal’s back,” he said. “I believe it is the armored alien’s bootprint.” “What do you mean, son?” a new man asked. His voice was older and rough. “I can only offer my opinion, sir. I am not a scientist.” “Offer it, Master Chief,” the same scratchy voice said. “I, for one, would be very interested to hear whatsomeone with firsthandexperience has to say . . . for a change.” There was a rustle of papers in the shadows, then silence. “Well, sir—it looks to me like this Jackal simply got in the larger creature’s way. There’s no attempt tomove it, and no deviation in the path of the following footfalls. It simply walked over the smaller alien.” “Evidence of a hierarchical caste structure perhaps?” the old man murmured. “Let’s move on,” the woman again spoke, her voice now laced with irritation. The holo image changed yet again. A stone object appeared—the rock the Master Chief recovered fromthe museum. “This stone,” she said, “is a typical igneous granite specimen but with an unusual concentration ofaluminum oxide inclusions—specifically rubies. It is a match for the mineral specimens recovered fromgrid thirteen by twenty-four. “Master Chief,” she said, “you recovered this rock—” She paused. “From an optical scanner. Is thatcorrect?” “Yes, ma’am. The aliens had placed the rock in a red metallic box. Visible spectrum lasers werescanning the specimen.” “And the infrared pulse laser transmitter was hooked up to this scanner?” she asked. “You are certain?” “Absolutely, ma’am. My thermal imagers caught a fraction of the transmission scattered by the ambientdust.” The woman continued. “The rock sample is roughly pyramidal. The inclusions in the igneous matrix areunusual in that all possible crystalline morphologies for corundum are present: bipyramidal, prismatic,tabular, and rhombohedral. Scanning from the tip to the base with neutron imagers, we produce thefollowing pattern.” Again, a series of squares, triangles, bars and dots appeared on the view screen—symbols that againreminded John of Aztec writing. Déjà had taught the Spartans about the Aztecs—how Cortés with superior tactics and technology hadnearly obliterated an entire race. Was the same thing happening between the Covenant and humans? “Now, then,” the first male voice interjected, “this business with the detonation of a HAVOK tacticalnuclear device . . . do you realize that any additional evidence of Covenant activity on C.te d’Azur hasbeen effectively erased? Do you know what opportunities have been lost, soldier?” “I had extremely specific orders, sir,” the Master Chief said without hesitating. “Orders that camedirectly from NavSpecWep, Section Three.” “Section Three,” the woman muttered, “which is ONI . . . it figures.” The old man in the darkness chuckled. The faint glow of a cigar tip flared near his voice, then faded. “Are you insinuating, Master Chief,” the older man said, “that the destruction of all this ‘evidence,’ asmy colleges would call it, happened becausethey ordered it?” There was no good answer to that question. Whatever the Master Chief said was sure to irritate someonehere. “No, sir. I am simply stating that the destruction—of anything, including any ‘evidence’—is a directresult of the detonation of a nuclear weapon. In full compliance with my orders. Sir.” The first man whispered, “Jesus . . . what do you expect from one of Dr. Halsey’s windup toy soldiers?” “That’s quite enough, Colonel!” the older man snapped. “This man has earned the right to somecourtesy . . . even from you.” The older man lowered his voice. “Master Chief, thank you. We’re finished here, I think. We may wishto recall you later . . . but for now, you are dismissed. You are to treat all information you have heard orseen at this debriefing as classified.” “Yes, sir!” The Master Chief saluted, spun on his heel, and marched to the exit. The double doors opened and then sealed behind him. He exhaled. It felt like he was being evac’d fromthe battlefield. He reminded himself that these last few steps were often the most dangerous. “I hope they treated you well . . . or at least decently.” Dr. Halsey sat in an overstuffed chair. She wore a long gray skirt that matched her hair. She rose andtook his hand and gave it a small squeeze. The Master Chief snapped to attention. “Ma’am, a pleasure to see you again.” “How are you, Master Chief?” she asked. She stared pointedly at the hand pressed to his forehead in atight salute. Slowly, he dropped his hand. She smiled. Unlike everyone else, who greeted the Master Chief and stared at his uniform, medals,ribbons, or the Spartan insignia, Dr. Halsey stared into his eyes. And she never saluted. John had nevergotten used to that. “I’m fine, ma’am,” he said. “We won at Sigma Octanus. It was good to have a complete victory.” “Indeed it was.” She paused and glanced about. “How would you like to have another victory?” shewhispered. “The biggest we’ve ever had?” “Of course, ma’am,” he said with no hesitation. “I was counting on you to say that, Master Chief. We’ll be speaking soon.” She turned to the MilitaryPolice attendant waiting at the entrance to the lounge. “Open these damn doors, soldier. Let’s get thisover with.” “Yes, ma’am,” the MP said. The doors swung inward. She stopped and said to the Master Chief, “I’ll be speaking to you and the other Spartans, soon.” Shethen entered the darkened chamber and the doors sealed behind her. The Master Chief forgot about the debriefing and Captain Keyes’ puzzling question about not winning. If Dr. Halsey had a mission for him and his team, it would be a good one. She had given him everything: duty, honor, purpose, and a destiny to protect humanity. John hoped she would give him one more thing: a way to win the war. Chapter 25 0915 Hours, August 25, 2552 (Military Calendar) /Epsilon Eridani System, Reach UNSC Military Complex, planet Reach, Omega Wing—SectionThree secure facility“Good morning, Dr. Halsey,” Déjà said. “You’re fourteen point three minutes late this morning.” “Blame security, Déjà,” Dr. Halsey replied, gesturing absently at the AI’s holographic projectionfloating above her desk. “ONI’s precautions here are becoming increasingly ridiculous.” Dr. Halsey threw her coat over the back of an antique armchair before settling behind her desk. Shesighed, and for the thousandth time, wished she had a window. The private office was located deep underground, inside the “Omega Wing” of the super-secure ONIfacility, codenamed simply CASTLE. Castle was a massive complex, two thousand meters below the granite protection of the HighlandMountains—bombproof, well defended, and impenetrable. The security had its drawbacks, she was forced to admit. Every morning she descended into the secretlabyrinth, passed through a dozen security checkpoints, and submitted to a barrage of retina, voice,fingerprint, and brainwave ID scans. ONI had buried her here years ago when her funding had been shunted to higher profile projects. Allother personnel had been transferred to other operations, and her access to classified materials had beenseverely restricted. Even shadowy ONI was squeamish about her experiments. That’s all changed—thanks to the Covenant, she thought. The SPARTAN project—unpopular with theAdmiralty, and the scientific community—had proven most effective. Her Spartans had proventhemselves time after time in countless ground engagements. When the Spartans started racking up successes, the Admiralty’s reticence vanished. Her meager budgethad mushroomed overnight. They had offered her a corner office in the prestigious Olympic Tower atFLEETCOM HQ. She had, of course, declined. Now the brass and VIPs that wanted to see her had to spend half the dayjust getting through the security barriers to her lair. She relished the irony—her banishment had becomea bureaucratic weapon. But none of that really mattered. It was just a means to an end for Dr. Halsey . . . a means to gettingProject MJOLNIR back on track. She reached for her coffee cup and knocked a stack of papers off her desk. They fell, scattered onto thefloor, and she didn’t bother to retrieve them. She examined the mud-brown dregs in the bottom of themug; it was several days old. The office of the most important scientist in the military was not the antiseptic clean-room environmentmost people expected. Classified files and papers littered the floor. The holographic projector overheadpainted the ceiling with a field of stars. Rich maple paneling covered the walls and hanging there wereframed photographs of her SPARTAN IIs, receiving awards, and the plethora of articles about them thatappeared when the Admiralty had made the project public three years ago. They had been called the UNSC’s “super soldiers.” The military brass had assured her that the boost tomorale was worth the compromised security. At first she had protested. But ironically, the publicity had proved convenient. With all the attention onthe Spartans’ heroics, no one had thought to question their true purpose—or their origin. If the truth evercame to light—abducted children, replaced by fast-grown clones; the risky, experimental surgeries andbiochemical augmentations—public opinion would turn against the SPARTAN project overnight. The recent events at Sigma Octanus had given the Spartans and MJOLNIR the final push it needed toenter its final operational phase. She slipped on her glasses and called up the files from yesterday’s debriefing; the ONI computer systemonce again confirmed her retinal scan and voiceprint. IDENTITY CONFIRMED. UNAUTHORIZED ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE UNIT DETECTED. ACCESS DENIED. Damn. ONI grew more paranoid by the day. “Déjà,” she said with a frustrated sigh. “The spooks are nervous. I need to power you down, or ONIwon’t give me access to the files.” “Of course, Doctor,” Déjà replied calmly. Halsey keyed the power-down sequence on her desktop terminal, sending Déjà into standby mode. This,she thought, is Ackerson’s work, the bastard. She had fought tooth and nail to keep Déjà free from theprogramming shackles ONI demanded . . . and this was their petty revenge. She scowled impatiently until the computer system finally spit out the data she’d requested. The tinyprojectors in the frames of her glasses beamed the data directly to her retina. Her eyes darted back and forth rapidly, as if she had entered REM sleep, as she scanned thedocumentation from the debriefing. Finally she removed her glasses and tossed them carelessly on thedesk, a sardonic smirk on her face. The overarching conclusion of the finest military experts on the debriefing committee: ONI didn’t havea clue as to what the Covenant were doing on Sigma Octanus IV. They had learned only four solid facts from the entire operation. First, the Covenant had gone toconsiderable trouble to obtain a single mineral specimen. Second, the pattern of inclusions in thatigneous rock sample matched the signal that had been sent—and intercepted by theIroquois . Third, thelow entropy of the pattern indicated that it was not random. And fourth, and most important, UNSCtranslation software couldn’t match this pattern to any known Covenant dialect. Her personal conclusions? Either the alien artifact was from a precursor to the present Covenantsociety . . . or it was from another, as yet undiscovered, alien culture. When she had dropped that little bombshell of a speculation in the debriefing room yesterday, the ONIspecialists had gone scrambling for cover. Especially that arrogant ass, Colonel Ackerson, she thoughtwith a cruel smile. The brass was not happy with either possibility. If it was old Covenant technology, it indicated they stillknew virtually nothing about the Covenant culture. Twenty years of intensive study and trillions ofdollars of research and they barely even understood the alien’s caste system. And if it was the latter possibility, an artifact of another alien race . . . that could be even moreproblematic. Colonel Ackerson and some of the brass had immediately considered the logistics offighting two alien enemies at once. Utterly ridiculous. They couldn’t even fight one. The UNSC couldnever hope to survive a war on two fronts. She pinched the bridge of her nose. Despite the grim conclusions, there was a silver lining in all this. After the meeting, a new mandate had become the official secret policy of Fleet Command’s SpecialOperations Command—the parent organization for Naval Special Warfare, the Spartans’ service branch. ONI had new marching orders: to step up funding of Intel and reconnaissance missions by an order ofmagnitude. Small stealth ships were to be deployed to search remote systems and find where theCovenant were based. And Dr. Halsey had finally received the green light to unleash MJOLNIR. She had mixed feelings about it. The truth be told, she always had. It would be the culmination of her life’s greatest work. She knew the risks—like spinning a roulettewheel, it was long odds, but the payoff was potentially huge. It meant victory against the Covenant . . . or the death of all her Spartans. The holographic crystals overhead warmed and Cortana appeared, sitting cross-legged on Dr. Halsey’sdesk—actually she sat hovering a centimeter off the table’s edge. Cortana was slender. The hue of her skin varied from navy blue to lavender, depending on her mood andthe ambient lighting. Her “hair” was cropped short. Her face had a hard angular beauty. Lines of codeflickered up and down her luminous body. And if Dr. Halsey viewed her from the right angle, she couldcatch a glimpse of the skeletal structure inside her ghostly form. “Good morning, Dr. Halsey,” Cortana said. “I’ve read the committee’s report—” “—which was classified as Top Secret, Eyes Only.” “Hmm . . . ” Cortana mused. “I must have overlooked that.” She hopped off the desk and circled aroundDr. Halsey once. Cortana had been programmed with ONI’s best insurgency software, as well as the determination to usethose code-cracking skills. While this had been necessary for her mission, when she grew bored, shecaused chaos with ONI’s own security measures . . . and she often grew bored. “I assume you have examined the classified data brought back from Sigma Octanus Four?” Halsey asked. “I might have seen that somewhere,” Cortana said matter-of-factly. “Your analysis and conclusions?” “There is much more evidence to consider than the data in the committee’s files.” She looked off intospace as if reading something. “Oh?” “Forty years ago a geological survey team on Sigma Octanus Four found several igneous rocks withsimilar—though not identical—anomalous compositions. UNSC geologists believe that these sampleswere introduced onto the planet via meteorite impacts—they typically are found in long-eroded impactcraters on the planet surface. Isotopic dating of the site place those impact craters at present minus sixtythousand years—” Cortana paused as a hint of a smile played across her holographic features. “—thoughthat figure may be inaccurate due to human error, of course.” “Of course,” Dr. Halsey replied dryly. “I have also, um . . . coordinated with UNSC’s astrophysics department and discovered some interestingbits archived in their long-range observational databases. There is a black hole located approximatelyforty thousand light-years from the Sigma Octanus System. An extremely powerful pulse-lasertransmission back-scattered the matter in the accretion disk—essentially trapped this signal as thismatter accelerated toward the speed of light. From our perspective, according to special relativity, thisessentially froze the residue of this information on the event horizon.” “I’ll take your word for it,” Dr. Halsey said. “This ‘frozen signal’ contains information that matches the sample from Sigma Octanus Four.” Cortanasighed and her shoulders slumped. “Unfortunately, all my attempts at translating the code have failed . . . so far.” “Your conclusions, Cortana?” Dr. Halsey reminded her. “Insufficient data for complete analysis, Doctor.” “Hypothesize.” Cortana bit her lower lip. “There are two possibilities. The data originates from the Covenant or anotheralien race.” She frowned. “If it’s another alien species, the Covenant probably wants these artifacts toscavenge their technology. Either conclusion opens several new opportunities for the NavSpecWep—” “I am aware of that,” Dr. Halsey said, raising her hand. If she allowed the AI to continue, Cortana wouldtalk all day. “One of those opportunities is Project MJOLNIR.” Cortana spun around and her eyes widened. “They approved the final phase?” “Is it possible, Cortana,” Dr. Halsey replied, amused, “that I know something you don’t?” Cortana wrinkled her brow in frustration, then smoothed her features to their normal placid state. “Isuppose that is a remote possibility. If you’d like, I can calculate those odds.” “No, thank you, Cortana,” Halsey replied. Cortana reminded Dr. Halsey of herself when she had been an adolescent: smarter than her parents,always reading, talking, learning, and eager to share her knowledge with anyone who would listen. Of course, there was a very good reason why Cortana reminded Dr. Halsey of herself. Cortana was a “smart” AI, an advanced artificial construct. Actually, the termssmart anddumb as appliedto AIs, were misleading; all AIs were extraordinarily intelligent. But Cortana was special. So-called dumb AIs were engineered to function only were misleading; within set limits of theirdynamic memory-processing matrix. They were brilliant within their fields of expertise, but werelacking in “creativity.” Déjà, for example, was a “dumb” AI—incredibly useful, but limited. Smart AIs like Cortana, however, had no limits on their dynamic memory-processor matrix. Knowledgeand creativity could grow unchecked. She would pay a price for her genius, however. Such growth eventually led to self-interference. Cortanawould one day literally start thinking too much at the expense of her normal functions. It was as if ahuman were to think with so much of his brain that he stopped sending impulses to his heart and lungs. Like all the other smart AIs that Dr. Halsey had worked with over the years, Cortana would effectively“die” after an operational life of seven years. But Cortana’s mind was unique among all the other AIs Dr. Halsey had encountered. An AI’s matrixwas created by sending electrical bursts through the neural pathways of a human brain. Those pathwayswere then replicated in a superconducting nano-assemblage. The technique destroyed the original humantissue, so they could only be obtained from a suitable candidate that had already died. Cortana, however,had to have the best mind available. The success of her mission and the lives of the Spartans woulddepend on it. At Dr. Halsey’s insistence, ONI had arranged to have her own brain carefully cloned and her memoriesflash-transferred to the receptacle organs. Only one of the twenty cloned brains survived the process. Cortana had literally sprung from Dr. Halsey’s mind, like Athena from the head of Zeus. So, in a way, Cortanawas Dr. Halsey. Cortana straightened, her face eager. “When does the MJOLNIR armor become fully operational. Whendo I go?” “Soon. There are a few final modifications that need to be made in the systems.” Cortana leaped to her “feet,” turned her back to Dr. Halsey, and examined the photographs on the wall. She brushed her fingertips over the glass surfaces. “Which one will be mine?” “Which one do you want?” She immediately gravitated to the picture in the center of Dr. Halsey’s collection. It showed a handsomeman standing at attention as Admiral Stanforth pinned the UNSC Legion of Honor upon his chest—achest that already overflowed with citations. Cortana framed her fingers around the man’s face. “He’s so serious,” she murmured. “Thoughtful eyes,though. Attractive in a primitive animal sort of way, don’t you think, Doctor?” Dr. Halsey blushed. Apparently, shedid think so. Cortana’s thoughts mirrored many of her own, onlyunchecked by normal military and social protocol. “Perhaps it would be best if you picked another—” Cortana turned to face Dr. Halsey and cocked an eyebrow, mock stern. “Youasked me which one Iwanted. . . .” “It was a question, Cortana. I did not give you carte blanche to select your ‘carrier.’ There arecompatibility issues to consider.” Cortana blinked. “His neural patterns are in sync with my mine within two percent. With the newinterface we’ll be installing, that should fall well within tolerable limits. In fact—” Her gaze drifted andthe symbols along her body brightened and flashed. “—I have just developed a custom interface bufferthat will match us within zero point zero eight one percent. You won’t find a better match among theothers. “In fact,” she added coyly, “I can guarantee it.” “I see,” Dr. Halsey said. She pushed away from her desk, stood, and paced. Why was she hesitating? The matchwas superb. But was Cortana’s predilection for Spartan 117 a resultof him being Dr. Halsey’s favorite? And did it matter? Who better to protect him? Dr. Halsey walked over to the picture. “He was awarded this Legion of Honor medallion because hedove into a bunker of Covenant soldiers. He took out twenty by himself and saved a platoon of Marineswho were pinned down by a stationary energy weapon emplacement. I’ve read the report, but I’m stillnot sure how he managed to do it.” She turned to Cortana and stared into her odd translucent eyes. “You’ve read his CSV?” “I’m reading it again right now.” “Then you know he is neither the smartest nor the fastest nor the strongest of the Spartans. But he is thebravest—and quite possibly the luckiest. And in my opinion, he is the best.” “Yes,” Cortana whispered. “I concur with your analysis, Doctor.” She drifted closer. “Could you sacrifice him if you had to? If it meant completing the mission?” Dr. Halsey asked quietly. “Could you watch him die?” Cortana halted and the processing symbols racing across her skin froze midcalculation. “My priority Alpha order is to complete this mission,” she replied emotionlessly. “The Spartans’ safetyas well as mine is a Beta-level priority command.” “Good.” Dr. Halsey returned to her desk and sat down. “Then you can have him.” Cortana smiled and blazed with brilliant electricity. “Now,” Dr. Halsey said, and tapped on her desk to regain Cortana’s attention. “Show me your pick ofour ship candidates for the mission.” Cortana opened her hand. In her palm there was a tiny model of a Halcyon-class UNSC cruiser. “ThePillar of Autumn,” Cortana said. Dr. Halsey leaned back and crossed her arms. Modern USNC cruisers were rare in the fleet. Only ahandful of the impressive warships remained . . . and those were being pulled back to bolster the defenseof the Inner Colonies. This junk-heap, however, was not one of these ships. “ThePillar of Autumn is forty-three years old,” Cortana said. “Halcyon-class ships were the smallestvessel ever to receive the cruiser designation. It is approximately one-third the tonnage of the Marathonclasscruiser currently in service. “Halcyon-class ships were pulled from long-term storage—they were designated to be scrapped, in fact. TheAutumn was refit in 2550, to serve in the current conflict near Zeta Doradus. Their Mark Two fusionengines supply a tenth of the power of modern reactors. Their armor is light by current standards. Weapon refits have upgraded their offensive capabilities with a single Magnetic Acceleration Cannonand six Archer missile pods. “The only noteworthy design feature of this ship is the frame.” Cortana reached down and pulled off theskin of the holographic model as if it were a glove. “The structural system was designed by a Dr. RobertMcLees—cofounder of the Reyes-McLees Shipyards over Mars—in 2510. It was, at the time, deemedunnecessarily overmassed and costly due to series of cross-bracings and interstitial honeycombs. Thedesign was subsequently dropped from all further production models. Halcyon-class ships, however,have a reputation for being virtually indestructible. Reports indicate these ships being operational evenafter sustaining breaches to all compartments and losing ninety percent of their armor.” “Their duty record?” Dr. Halsey asked. “Substandard,” Cortana replied. “They are slow and ineffective in offensive combat. They are somewhatof a joke within the fleet.” “Perfect,” Dr. Halsey said. “I concur with your final selection recommendation. We will start the refitoperations at once.” “All we need now,” Cortana said, “is a Captain and crew.” “Ah yes, the Captain.” Dr. Halsey slid on her glasses. “I have the perfect man for the job. He’s a tacticalgenius. I’ll forward you his CSV, and you can see for yourself.” She transferred the file to Cortana. Cortana smiled, but it quickly faded. “His maneuvers at Sigma Octanus Four were performed without anonboard AI?” “His ship left dock without an AI for technical reasons. I believe he has no compunctions about workingwith computers. In fact, it was one of the first refit requests he put in for theIroquois .” Cortana did not look convinced. “Besides, he has the most important qualification for this job,” Dr. Halsey said. “The man can keep asecret.” Chapter 26 0800 Hours, August 27, 2552 (Military Calendar) /Epsilon Eridani System, FLEETCOM Military Complex, planet ReachThis was the third time John had been in this highly secure briefing room on Reach. The amphitheaterhad an aura of secrecy, as if matters of grave importance had regularly been discussed within its circularwall. Certainly, every time he had been here, his life had changed. His first time was his indoctrination into the Spartans—a lifetime ago. He recalled with a start howyoung Dr. Halsey had looked then. The second time was when he graduated from the Spartan program,when he had last seen Chief Mendez. He had sat on the bench next to him—where the Chief was sittingnow. And today? He had a feeling that everything was about to change all over again. Clustered around him were two dozen Spartans: Fred, Linda, Joshua, James, and many others he had notspoken to for years; constant battle had kept the tight-knit Spartans light-years apart for more than adecade. Dr. Halsey and Captain Keyes entered the chamber. The Spartans stood at attention and saluted. Keyes returned their salute. “At ease,” he said. He escortedDr. Halsey to the center stage. He sat while she stood at the podium. “Good evening, Spartans,” she said. “Please take your seats.” As one, they sat down. “Assembled here tonight,” she said, “are all surviving Spartans save three, who are otherwise engagedon fields of combat too distant to be easily recalled. In the last decade of combat there have only beenthree KIAs and one Spartan too wounded to continue active duty. You are to be commended for havingthe best operational record of any unit in the fleet.” She paused to look at them. “It is very good to seeyou all again.” She slipped on her glasses. “Admiral Stanforth has asked me to brief you on the upcoming mission. Dueto its complexity and unusual nature, please disregard your normal protocol and ask any questions youhave during my presentation. Now, on to the business at hand: the Covenant.” Holographic projectors overhead warmed and sleek Covenant corvettes, frigates, and destroyersappeared in a neat row on Dr. Halsey’s left. On her right were a collection of Covenant species, roughlyone-third their normal size. There was a Grunt, a Jackal, the floating, tentacled creature John had seen onSigma Octanus IV, as well as the heavily armored behemoths he and his team had bested. A spike of adrenaline burned through the Master Chief at the sight of the enemy. Intellectually, he knewthat the images were not real . . . but after a decade of fighting, his instincts were to kill first and get thedetails later. “The Covenant are still largely unknown to us,” Dr. Halsey began. “Their motivations and thoughtprocesses remain a mystery—though our best analysis points to some compelling hypotheses.” She paused, and added, “The following information is, naturally, classified. “We know that the Covenant—our translation of their name for themselves—are a conglomerate of anumber of different alien species. We believe that they exist in some kind of caste structure, though todate the exact nature of that structure remains unknown. Our best guess is that the Covenant conquer and‘absorb’ a species, and adapt its strengths into their own. “The Covenant’s science is imitative rather then innovative, a by-product of this societal ‘absorption,’ ” Dr. Halsey continued. “This is not to say that they are lacking intelligence, however. During our firstencounter they gathered computer and network components from our destroyed ships . . . and theylearned at an astonishing pace. “By the time Admiral Cole’s fleet arrived at Harvest, the Covenant initiated a communications link andattempted a primitive software infiltration of our ship AIs. In a matter of weeks, they had learned therudiments of our computer systems and our language. Our own attempts to decipher Covenant computersystems have only been partially successful, despite our best efforts and decades of time. “Since then they have made increasingly successful forays into our computer networks. That is why theCole Protocol is so important and carries the punishment of treason for failure to comply. The Covenantmay one day not need to capture a ship to steal the information within its navigational databanks.” The Master Chief stole a glance at Captain Keyes. The Captain cupped an antique pipe in one hand; theNavy officer puffed on it once, and stared thoughtfully at Dr. Halsey and the examples of the Covenantvessels. He slowly shook his head. “As I stated earlier,” Dr. Halsey continued, “the Covenant are a collection of genetically distinct groupsin what we believe is a rigid caste system.” She waved toward the Grunts and Jackals. “These are mostlikely part of their military or warrior caste—not the highest ranking caste, either, given how many aresacrificed during ground operations. We believe there is a ‘race’ of field commanders, which we arecurrently calling ‘Elites.’ ” She stepped toward the floating, tentacular aliens. “We believe these are their scientists.” As she movedcloser, the figure animated; the image showed the creature disassembling an electric car of humanmanufacture. John instantly recognized his own battlefield recording. She pointed to the giant armored creatures. “This was recorded on Sigma Octanus Four. A heavilyarmored warrior superior to either Grunts or Jackals.” The massive aliens also sprang into motion,lumbering into combat, until Dr. Halsey froze the images in place. She turned and strolled back to the podium. “ONI hypothesizes at least two additional castes. A warriorcapable of commanding ground forces and possibly piloting their ships, and a leadership caste. We havedeciphered a handful of Covenant transmissions that refer to—” She paused, checking notes on the datascreen in her glasses. “—Ah, yes. ‘Prophets.’ We believe that these Prophets are in fact the leadershipcaste, and that they are viewed by the Covenant rank and file with an almost religious reverence.” Dr. Halsey removed her glasses. “This is where you come in. Your mission will involve these so-calledProphets, and will be executed in four phases. “Phase one. You will engage the Covenant and sufficiently disable, but not destroy, one of their ships.” She turned to face Captain Keyes. “I leave that in the capable hands of Captain Keyes and his newlyrefitted ship, thePillar of Autumn .” Captain Keyes acknowledged her compliment with a curt nod. He tapped the stem of his pipe on his lipsthoughtfully. The Master Chief was unaware of any Covenant ship ever being captured. He had read the reports ofCaptain Keyes’ actions at Sigma Octanus IV . . . and considered the odds of actually capturing aCovenant vessel. Even for a Spartan, it would be a difficult mission. “Phase two,” Dr. Halsey said. “Spartans will board the disabled Covenant ship—neutralize the crew, andcrack their navigation database. We will do precisely what they have been trying to do to us: find thelocation of their home world.” The Master Chief raised his hand. “Yes, Master Chief?” “Ma’am. We will be given mission specialist personnel to access the Covenant computers?” “In a manner of speaking,” she said, and looked away. “I will come to that point in a moment. Let meassure you, however, that these specialists will cause you no serious complications during this phase. Infact, they will prove rather useful in combat. Shortly, you shall have a demonstration.” Like Captain Keyes’ statement that winning wasn’t everything . . . Dr. Halsey’s reply was anotherpuzzle. How would such computer specialists not be a liability to the Spartans in combat? Even if theycould fight, it was unlikely they’d be anything but weak links in combat. If they couldn’t fight, theSpartans would be forced to baby-sit a vulnerable package in a hot combat zone. “Phase three,” Dr. Halsey said, “will consist of taking the captured Covenant ship to their homeworld.” Several questions immediately formed in the Master Chief’s mind. Who would pilot the alien ship? Hadany one ever deciphered the Covenant control systems? It seemed unlikely since the UNSC had nevercaptured one of their ships before. Were there Covenant recognition signals that had to be sent whenentering their space? Or would they just steal their way in-system? When a plan had so many missing pieces of data, the Spartans had been trained to stop and reconsider itseffectiveness. Unanswered questions led to complications—“snags.” And snags led to injuries, death,and failed missions. Simple was better. He held his questions, though. Dr. Halsey surely would have planned for these eventualities. “Phase four,” she continued, “will be to infiltrate and capture the Covenant leadership and return withthem to UNSC-controlled space.” The Master Chief shifted uneasily. There was no intel or reconnaissance of Covenant-held space. Whatdid a Covenant leader—a Prophet—even look like? Chief Mendez had told him to trust Dr. Halsey. The Master Chief decided to hear all the details beforehe asked any further questions. To do so might undermine her authority. And that’s the last thing heneeded the other Spartans to see. And yet, there was one thing hehad to clarify. The Master Chief raised his hand again. She nodded toward him. “Dr. Halsey,” he said, “you did say ‘capture’ the Covenant leaders—not eliminate them?” “Correct,” she replied. “Our profile of Covenant society indicates that if you were to kill one of theirleader caste, this war could actually escalate. Your orders are to preserve any captured Covenant leadersat all costs. You will bring them back to UNSC headquarters, where we will then use them to broker atruce, possibly even negotiate a peace treaty with the Covenant.” Peace? The Master Chief considered the unfamiliar word. Was that what Captain Keyes had meant? Thealternative to winning wasn’t necessarily losing. If you chose not to play a game, then there could beneither winning nor losing. Dr. Halsey took a deep breath and slowly exhaled. “Some of you already suspect this, but I shall state itanyway for emphasis. It is my opinion, and that of many others, that the war is not going well . . . despite our recent victories. What is not widely known is how badly it is going for us. ONI predicts thatwe have months, perhaps as much as a standard year, before the Covenant locates and destroys ourremaining Inner Colonies . . . and then moves against Earth.” The Master Chief had heard the rumors—and promptly dismissed them—but to hear the words fromsomeone he trusted chilled him to the core. “Your mission will prevent this,” Dr. Halsey said. She stopped and frowned, lowered her head, thenfinally looked up at them again. “This op is considered extremely high risk. There are unknownelements involved and we simply do not have the time to gather the required intelligence. I havepersuaded FLEETCOM not to order you on this mission. Admiral Stanforth is asking for volunteers.” The Master Chief understood. Dr. Halsey was unsure if she would be spending their lives or wastingthem on this mission. He stood without hesitation—and as he did so, the rest of the Spartans stood as well. “Good,” she said. She paused and blinked several times. “Very good. Thank you.” She stepped away from the podium. “We will meet with you individually within a few days to continueyour briefing. I will show you how you will get our computer experts on board the Covenant vessel . . . and I will show you the one thing that will let you get through this mission in one piece: MJOLNIR.” Chapter 27 0600 Hours, August 29, 2552 (Military Calendar) /Epsilon Eridani System, UNSC Military Reservation01478-B, planet ReachThe firing range was uncharacteristically quiet. Normally, the air would be filled with noise—the sharp,staccato crackle of automatic-weapons fire; the urgent yells of soldiers practicing combat operations;and the barked, curse-laden orders of drill instructors. John frowned as he guided the Warthog to thesecurity checkpoint. The silence on the combat range was somehow unsettling. Even more unsettling were the extra security personnel; today, there were three times the normal numberof MPs patrolling the gate. John parked the Warthog and was approached by a trio of MPs. “State your business here, sir,” the leadMP demanded. Without a word, John handed over his papers—orders direct from the top brass. The MP visiblystiffened. “Sir, my apologies. Dr. Halsey and the others are waiting for you at the P and R area.” The guard saluted, and waved the gate open. On survey maps, the combat training range was listed as “UNSC Military Reservation 01478-B.” Thesoldiers who trained there had a different name for it—“Painland.” John knew the facility well; a greatdeal of the Spartans’ early training had taken place there. The range was divided into three areas: a live-fire obstacle course; a target practice range; and the P&R—“Prep and Recovery” area—which more often than not doubled as an emergency first-aid station. John had spent plenty of time in the aid station during his training. The Master Chief walked briskly to the prefabricated structure. Another pair of MPs, MA5B assaultrifles at the ready, double-checked his credentials before they admitted him to the building. “Ah, here at last,” said an unfamiliar voice. “Let’s go, son, on the double, if you please.” John paused; the speaker was an older man, at least in his sixties, in the coveralls and lab coat of a ship’sdoctor. No rank insignia, though, John thought with a twinge of concern. For a moment, the image of hisfellow Spartans—very young, and clubbing, kicking, and beating un-uniformed instructors intounconsciousness flashed into his memory with crystal clarity. “Who are you, sir?” he asked, his voice cautious. “I’m a Captain in the UNSC Navy, son,” the man said with a thin-lipped smile, “and I’ve no time forspit and polish today. Let’s go.” A Captain—and new orders. Good. “Yes, sir.” The Captain in the lab coat escorted him into the P&R’s medical bay. “Undress, please,” the man said. John quickly disrobed, then stacked his neatly folded uniform on a nearby gurney. The Captain steppedbehind him and began to swab John’s neck and the back of his head with a foul-smelling liquid. Theliquid felt ice-cold on his skin. A moment later, Dr. Halsey entered. “This will just take a moment, Master Chief. We’re going toupgrade a few components in your standard-issue neural interface. Lie back and remain still, please.” The Master Chief did as she said. A technician sprayed a topical anesthetic on his neck. The skin tingled,then went cold and numb. The Master Chief felt layers of skin incised, and then a series of distinctclicking sounds that echoed through his skull. There was a brief laser pulse and another spray. He sawsparks, felt the room spin, then a sense of vertigo. His vision blurred; he blinked rapidly and it quicklyreturned to normal. “Good . . . the procedure is complete,” Dr. Halsey said. “Please follow me.” The Captain handed the Master Chief a paper gown. He slipped it on and followed the doctor outside. A field command dome had been assembled on the range. Its white fabric walls rippled in the breeze. Ten MPs stood around the structure, assault rifles in hand. The Master Chief noted these weren’t regularMarines. They wore the gold comet insignia of Special Forces Orbital drop Shock Troopers—“Helljumpers.” Tough and iron-disciplined. A flash of memory: the blood of troops—just like these—soaking into the mat of a boxing ring. John felt his adrenaline spike as soon as he saw the soldiers. Dr. Halsey approached the MP at the entrance and presented her credentials. They accepted them andscanned her retina and voiceprint, then did the same to the Master Chief. Once they confirmed his identify, they immediately saluted—which was technically unnecessary, as theMaster Chief was out of uniform. He did them the courtesy of returning their salute. The soldiers kept looking around, scanning the field, as if they were expecting something to happen. John’s discomfort grew—not much spooked an Orbital drop Shock Trooper. Dr. Halsey led the Master Chief inside. In the center of the dome stood an empty suit of MJOLNIRarmor, suspended between two pillars on a raised platform. The Master Chief knew it was not his suit. His, after years of use, had dents and scratches in the alloy plates and the once iridescent green finishhad dulled to a worn olive brown. This suit was spotless and its surface possessed a subtle metallic sheen. He noted the armor plates wereslightly thicker, and the black underlayers had a more convoluted weave of components. The fusionpack was half again as large, and tiny luminous slits glowed near the articulation points. “This is the real MJOLNIR,” Dr. Halsey whispered to him. “What you have been using was only afraction of what the armor should be. This—” She turned to the Master Chief. “—is everything I hadalways dreamed it could be. Please put the suit on.” The Master Chief stripped the paper gown off and—with the help of a pair of technicians—donned thearmor components. Dr. Halsey averted her eyes. Although the armor’s components were bulkier and heavier than his old suit, once assembled andactivated, they felt light as air. The armor was a perfect fit. The biolayer warmed and adhered to his skin,then cooled as the temperature difference between the suit and his skin equalized. “We’ve made hundreds of minor technical improvements,” she said. “I’ll have the specifications sent toyou later. Two of those changes, however, are rather serious modifications to the system. It may take . . . some getting used to.” Dr. Halsey’s brow furrowed. John had never seen her worried before. “First,” she told him, “we have replicated, and I might add, improved upon the energy shield theCovenant Jackals have been using against us to great effect.” This armor had shields? The Master Chief had known that ONI research had been working on adaptingCovenant technology; Spartans had standing orders to capture Covenant machines wherever they could. The researchers and engineers had announced some breakthroughs in artificial gravity—some UNSCships were already undergoing trials with the grav systems. The fact that the MJOLNIR armor possessed shields was a stunning breakthrough. For years, there hadbeen no luck back-engineering Covenant shield tech. Most in the scientific community had given uphope of ever cracking it. Maybe that’s why Dr. Halsey was worried. Maybe they hadn’t worked out allthe bugs. Dr. Halsey nodded to the technicians. “Let’s begin.” The techs turned to a series of instrument panels. One, a slightly younger man, donned a COM headset. “Okay, Master Chief.”The tech’s voice crackled through John’s helmet speakers.“There’s an activationicon in your heads-up display. There is also a manual control switch located at position twelve in yourhelmet.” He chinned the control. Nothing happened. “Wait a moment, please, sir. We have to give the suit an activation charge. After that, it can acceptregenerative power from the fusion pack. Stand on the platform and be absolutely still.” He stepped onto the platform that had held the MJOLNIR armor. The pillars flickered on and glowed abrilliant yellow. The pillars started to spin slowly around the base of the platform. The Master Chief felt a static charge tingling in his extremities. The glow intensified and his helmet’sblast shield automatically dimmed. The charge in the air intensified; his skin crawled with ionization. Hesmelled ozone. Then the spinning slowed and the light dimmed. “Reset the activation button now, Master Chief.” The air around the Master Chief popped—as if it jumped away from the MJOLNIR armor. There wasnone of the shimmer that normal Covenant shields had. Was it working? He ran his hand over his arm and encountered resistance a centimeter from the surface of the armor. Itwas working. How many times had he and his teammates had to find ways to slip past a Jackal’s shield? He’d have torethink his tactics. Rethink everything. “It provides full coverage—”Dr. Halsey’s voice piped through the speakers.“—and dissipates energyfar more efficiently than the Covenant shields the Spartans have recovered, though the shield isconcentrated on your arms, head, legs, chest, and back. The energy field tapers down to a hair under amillimeter so you don’t lose the ability to hold or manipulate items with your hands.” The lead technician activated another control, and new data scrawled across John’s display.“There’s asegmented bar in the upper corner of your HUD,”the technician said,“right next to your biomonitor andammunition indicators. It indicates the charge level of your shield. Don’t let it completely dissipate;when it’s gone, the armor starts taking the hits.” The Master Chief slipped off the platform. He skidded—then came to a halt. His movements felt oiled. His contact with the floor felt tentative. “You can adjust the bottom of your boot emitters as well as the emitters inside your gloves to increasetraction. In normal use, you will want to set these to the minimal level—just be aware your defenses willbe diminished in those locations.” “Understood.” He adjusted the field strengths. “In zero-gee environment I should increase those sectionsto full strength, correct?” “That is correct,”Dr. Halsey said. “How much damage can they take before the system is breached?” “That is what you will learn here today, Master Chief. I think you’ll find that we have several challengesin store for you to see how much punishment the suit can take.” He nodded. He was ready for the challenge. After weeks spent traveling in Slipspace, he was longoverdue for a workout. John slid back his helmet visor and turned to face Dr. Halsey. “You said there weretwo major systemimprovements, Doctor?” She nodded and smiled. “Yes, of course. ” She reached into her lab coat and withdrew a clear cube. “Idoubt you’ve ever seen one of these before. It is the memory-processor core of an AI.” “Like Déjà?” “Yes, like your former teacher. But this AI is slightly different. I’d like to introduce you to Cortana.” The Master Chief looked around the tent. He saw no computer interface or holographic projectors. Hecocked an eyebrow at Dr. Halsey. “There is a new layer sandwiched between the reactive circuits and the inner biolayers of your armor,” Dr. Halsey explained. “It is a weave of additional memory-processor super-conductor.” “The same material as an AI’s core.” “Yes,” Dr. Halsey replied. “An accurate analysis. Your armor will carry Cortana. The MJOLNIR systemhas the nearly the same capacity as a ship-borne AI system. Cortana will interface between you and thesuit and provide tactical and strategic information for you in the field.” “I’m not sure I understand.” “Cortana has been programmed with every ONI computer insurgency routine,” Dr. Halsey told him. “And she has a talent for modifying them on the fly. She has our best Covenant-language-translationsoftware as well. Her primary purpose is to infiltrate their computer and communications systems. Shewill intercept and decode point-to-point Covenant transmissions and give you updated intelligence in thefield.” Intel support in an operation where there had been no reconnaissance. The Master Chief liked that. Itwould level the playing field significantly. “This AI is the computer specialist we’ll be taking onto the Covenant ship,” the Master Chief said. “Yes . . . and more. Her presence will allow you to utilize the suit more effectively.” John had a sudden flash—AIs handled a great deal of point defense during Naval operations. “Can shecontrol the MJOLNIR armor?” He wasn’t sure he liked that. “No. Cortana resides in the interface between your mind and the suit, Master Chief. You will find yourreaction time greatly improved. She will be translating the impulses in your motor cortex directly intomotion—she can’t make you send those impulses.” “This AI,” he said, “will beinside my mind?” That must have been what that “upgrade” to his standardissueUNSC computer interface had been for. “That is the question, isn’t it?” Halsey replied. “I can’t answer that, Master Chief. Not scientifically.” “I’m not sure I understand, Doctor.” “What is the mind, really? Intuition, reason, emotion—we acknowledge they exist, but we still don’tknow what makes the human mindwork .” She paused, searching for the right words. “We model AIs onhuman neural networks—on electrical signals in the brain—because we just know that the human brainworks . . . but not how, or why. Cortana resides ‘between’ your mind and the suit, interpreting theelectrochemical messages in your brain and transferring them to the suit via your neural implant. “So, for lack of a better term, yes, Cortana will be ‘inside’ your mind.” “Ma’am, my priority will be to complete this mission. This AI—Cortana—may have conflictingdirectives.” “There is no need to worry, Master Chief. Cortana has the same mission parameters as you do. She willdo anything necessary to make sure that your mission is accomplished. Even if that means sacrificingherself—or you—to accomplish it.” The Master Chief exhaled, relieved. “Now, please kneel down. It’s time to insert her memory-processor matrix into the socket at the base ofyour neck.” The Master Chief knelt. There was a hissing noise, a pop, and then cold liquid poured into the MasterChief’s mind; a spike of pain jammed into his forehead, then faded. “Not a lot of room in here,” a smooth female voice said. “Hello, Master Chief.” Did this AI have a rank? Certainly, she was not a civilian—or a fellow soldier. Should he treat her likeany other piece of UNSC-issued equipment? Then again, he treated his equipment with the respect itdeserved. He made sure every gun and knife was cleaned and inspected after every mission. It was unsettling . . . he could hear Cortana’s voice through his helmet speakers, but it also felt like shewas speaking inside his head. “Hello, Cortana.” “Hmm . . . I’m detecting a high degree of cerebral cortex activity. You’re not the muscle-boundautomatons the press makes you out to be.” “Automaton?” the Master Chief whispered. “Interesting choice of words for an artificial intelligence.” Dr. Halsey watched the Master Chief with great interest. “You must forgive Cortana, Master Chief. Sheis somewhat high-spirited. You may have to allow for behavioral quirks.” “Yes, ma’am.” “I think we should begin the test straightaway. There’s no better way for the two of you to getacquainted than in simulated combat.” “No one said anything about combat,” Cortana said. “The ONI brass have arranged a test for you and the new MJOLNIR system,” Dr. Halsey said. “Thereare some that believe you two are not up to our proposed mission.” “Ma’am!” The Master Chief snapped to attention. “I’m up for it, ma’am!” “I know you are, Master Chief. Others . . . require proof.” She looked around at the shadows cast by theMarines outside the fabric walls of the command dome. “You hardly need a reminder to be prepared foranything . . . but stay on your guard, just the same.” Dr. Halsey’s voice dropped to a whisper. “I think some of the ONI brass would prefer to see you fail thistest, Master Chief. And they may have arranged to make sure you do—regardless of your performance.” “I won’t fail, Doctor.” Her forehead wrinkled with worry lines, but then they quickly disappeared. “I know you won’t.” She stepped back, and dropped her conspiratorial whisper. “Master Chief, you are ordered to count toten after I leave. After that, make your way to the obstacle course. At the far end is a bell. Your goal willbe to ring it.” She paused, then added, “You are authorized to neutralize any threats in order to achievethis objective.” “Affirmative,” the Master Chief said. Enough uncertainty—now he had an objective, and rules ofengagement. “Be careful, Master Chief,” Dr. Halsey said quietly. She gestured at the pair of technicians to follow her,then turned and walked out of the tent. The Master Chief didn’t understand why Dr. Halsey thought he was in real danger—he didn’t have tounderstand the reason. All he needed to know was that danger was present. He knew how to handle danger. “Uploading combat protocols now,” Cortana said. “Initiating electronic detection algorithms. Boostingneural interface performance to eighty-five percent. I’m ready when you are, Master Chief.” The Master Chief heard metallic clacks around the tent. “Analyzing sound pattern,” Cortana said. “Database match.Identified as—” “As someone cycling the bolt of an MA5B assault rifle. I know. Standard-issue weapons for Orbitaldrop Shock Troopers.” “Since you’re ‘in the know,’ Master Chief,” Cortana quipped. “I assume you have a plan.” John snapped his helmet visor back down and sealed the armor’s environment system. “Yes.” “Presumably your plan doesn’t involve getting shot . . . ?” “No.” “So, what’s the plan?” Cortana sounded worried. “I’m going to finish counting to ten.” John heard Cortana sigh in frustration. John shook his head in puzzlement. He’d never encountered a socalledsmart AI before. Cortana sounded . . . like a human. Worse, she sounded like acivilian . This was going to take a lot of getting used to. Shadows moved along the wall of the tent—motion from outside. Eight. There was a snag in this mission and he hadn’t even reached the obstacle course. He would have toengage his fellow soldiers. He pushed aside any questions about why. He had his orders and he wouldfollow them. He had dealt with ODSTs before. Nine. Three soldiers entered the tent, moving in slow motion—black-armored figures, helmets snug over theirfaces, crouched low, and their rifles leveled. Two took flanking positions. The one in the middle openedfire. Ten. The Master Chief blurred into motion. He dove from the activation platform and—before the soldierscould adjust their aim—landed in their midst. He rolled to his feet right next to the soldier who firedfirst, and grabbed the man’s rifle. John brutally yanked the weapon away from the soldier. There was a loud cracking sound as the man’sshoulder dislocated. The wounded trooper stumbled forward, off balance. John spun the rifle andslammed the butt of the weapon into the soldier’s side. The man exhaled explosively as his ribs cracked. He grunted, and fell unceremoniously to the floor, unconscious. John spun to face the left-flank gunner, assault rifle leveled at the man’s head instantly. He had the manin his sights, but he still had time—the soldier was not quite in position. To John’s enhanced senses,amped up by Cortana and the neural interface, the rifleman seemed to be moving in slow motion. Tooslow. The Master Chief lashed out with the rifle butt again. The trooper’s head snapped back from the sudden,powerful blow. He flipped head over tail and slammed into the ground. John sized the man’s conditionup with a practiced eye: shock, concussion, fractured vertebrae. Gunner number two was out of the fight. The remaining gunner completed his turn and opened fire. A three-round burst ricocheted off theMJOLNIR armor’s energy shield. The shield’s recharge bar flickered a hairbreadth. Before the soldier could react, the Master Chief sidestepped and slammed his own rifle down—hard. The trooper screamed as his leg gave out. A jagged spoke of bone burst through the wounded man’sfatigues. The Master chief finished him with a rifle butt to his helmeted head. John checked the condition of the rifle, and—satisfied that it was in working order—began to pull ammoclips from the fallen soldiers’ belt pouches. The lead soldier also carried a razor-edged combat knife;John grabbed it. “You could have killed them,” Cortana said. “Why didn’t you?” “My orders gave me permission to ‘neutralize’ threats,” he replied. “They aren’t threats anymore.” “Semantics,” Cortana replied. She sounded amused. “I can’t argue with the results, though—” She brokeoff, suddenly. “New targets. Seven contacts on the motion tracker,” Cortana reported. “We’resurrounded.” Seven more soldiers. The Master Chief could open fire now and kill them all. Under any othercircumstances, he would have removed such threats. But their MA5Bs were no immediate danger tohim . . . and the UNSC could use every soldier to fight the Covenant. He strode to the center pole of the tent, and with a yank, he pulled it free. As the roof fluttered down, heslashed a slit in the tent fabric and shoved through. He faced three Marines; they fired—the Master Chief deftly jumped to one side. He sprang toward themand lashed out with the steel pole, swiped out their legs. He heard bones crack—followed by screams ofpain. The Master Chief turned as the tent finished collapsing. The remaining four men could see him now. One reached for a grenade on his belt. The other three tracked him with their assault rifles. The Master Chief threw the pole like a javelin at the man with the grenade. It impacted in his sternumand he fell with awhoopf. The grenade, minus the pin, however, dropped to the ground. The Master Chief moved and kicked the grenade. It arced over the parking lot and detonated in a cloudof smoke and shrapnel. The three remaining Marines opened fire—spraying bullets in a full-auto fusillade. Bullets pinged offthe Master Chief’s shield. The shield status indicator blinked and dropped with each bullet impact—the sustained weapons fire wasdraining the shield precipitously. John tucked and rolled, narrowly avoiding an incoming burst ofautomatic-weapons fire, then sprang at the nearest Marine. John launched an openhanded strike at the man’s chest. The Marine’s ribs caved in and he droppedwithout a sound, blood flowing from his mouth. John spun, brought his rifle up, and fired twice. The second soldier screamed and dropped his rifle as the bullets tore through each knee. John kicked thediscarded rifle, bending the barrel and rendering the weapon useless. The last man stood frozen in place. The Master Chief didn’t give the man time to recover; he grabbed his rifle, ripped off his bandolier ofgrenades, then punched his helmet. The Marine dropped. “Mission time plus twenty-two seconds,” Cortana remarked. “Although, technically, you started to moveforty milliseconds before you were ordered to.” “I’ll keep that in mind.” The Master Chief slung the assault rifle and bandolier of grenades over his shoulder and ran for theshadows of the barracks. He slipped under the raised buildings and belly-crawled toward the obstaclecourse. No need to make himself a target for snipers . . . although it would be an interesting test to seewhat caliber of bullet these shields could deflect. No. That kind of thinking was dangerous. The shield was useful, but under combined fire it droppedvery quickly. He was tough . . . not invincible. He emerged at the beginning to the obstacle course. The first part was a run over ten acres of jaggedgravel. Sometimes raw recruits had to take off their boots before they crossed. Other than the pain—itwas the easiest part of the course. The Master Chief started toward the gravel yard. “Wait,” Cortana said. “I’m picking up far infrared signals on your thermal sensors. An encryptedsequence . . . decoding . . . yes, there. It’s an activation signal for a Lotus mine. They’ve mined the field,Master Chief.” The Master Chief froze. He’d used Lotus mines before and knew the damage they could inflict. Theshaped charges ripped though the armor plate of a tank like it was no thicker than an orange peel. This would slow him down considerably. Not crossing the obstacle course was no option. He had his orders. He wouldn’t cheat and go around. Hehad to prove that he and Cortana were up for this test. “Any ideas?” he asked. “I thought you’d never ask,” Cortana replied. “Find the position of one mine, and I can estimate therough position of the others based on the standard randomization procedure used by UNSC engineers.” “Understood.” The Master Chief grabbed a grenade, pulled the pin, counted to three, and lobbed it into the middle ofthe field. It bounced and exploded—sending a shock wave through the ground—tripping two of theLotus mines. Twin plumes of gravel and dust shot into the air. The detonation shook his teeth. He wondered if the armor’s shields could have survived that. He didn’t want to find out while he wasstill inside the thing. He boosted the field strength on the bottom of his boots to full. Cortana overlaid a grid on his heads-up display. Lines flickered as she ran through the possiblepermutations. “Got a match!” she said. Two dozen red circles appeared on his display. “That’s ninety-three percentaccurate. The best I can do.” “There are never any guarantees,” the Master Chief replied. He stepped onto the gravel, taking short, deliberate steps. With the shields activated on the bottoms ofhis boots, it felt like he was skating on greased ice. He kept his head down, picking his way between red dots on his display. If Cortana was wrong, he probably wouldn’t even know it. The Master Chief saw the gravel had ended. He looked up. He had made it. “Thank you, Cortana. Well done.” “You’re welcome . . .” Her voice trailed off. “Picking up scrambled radio frequencies on the D band. Encrypted orders from this facility to Fairchild Airfield. They’re using personal codewords, too—so Ican’t tell what they’re up to. Whatever it is, I don’t like it.” “Keep your ears open.” “I always do.” He ran to the next section of the obstacle course: the razor field. Here, recruits had to crawl in the mudunder razor wire as their instructors fired live rounds over them. A lot of soldiers discovered whetherthey had the guts to deal with bullets zinging a centimeter over their heads. Along either side of the course there was something new: three 30mm chain-guns mounted on tripods. “Weapons emplacements are targeting us, Chief!” Cortana announced. The Master Chief wasn’t about to wait and see if those chain-guns had a minimum-depth setting. He hadno intention of crawling across the field and letting the chain-guns’ rapid rate of fire chip away at hisshields. The chain-guns clicked and started to turn. He sprinted to the nearest tripod-mounted gun. He opened fire with his assault fire, shot the lines thatpowered the servos—then spun the chain-gun around to face the others. He crouched behind the blast shield and unloaded on the adjacent gun. Chain-guns were notoriouslyhard to aim; they were best known for their ability to fill the air with gunfire. Cortana adjusted histargeting reticle to sync up with the chain-gun. With her help, he hit the adjacent weapon emplacements. John guided a stream of fire into the guns’ ammo packs. Moments later, in a cloud of fire and smoke, theguns fell silent . . . then toppled. The Master Chief ducked, primed a grenade, and hurled it at the closest of the remaining automatedweapons. The grenade sailed through the air—then detonated just above the autogun. “Chain-gun destroyed,” Cortana reported. Two more grenades and the automated guns were out of commission. He noted that his shields haddropped by a quarter. He watched the status bar refill. He hadn’t even known he had taken hits. That wassloppy. “You seem to have the situation under control,” Cortana said, “I’m going to spend a few cycles andcheck something out.” “Permission granted,” he said. “I didn’t ask, Master Chief,” she replied. The cool liquid presence in his mind withdrew. The Master Chief felt empty somehow. He ran through the razor fields, snapping through steel wire as if it were rotten string. Cortana’s coolness once again flooded his thoughts. “I just accessed SATCOM,” she said. “I’m using one of their satellites so I can get a better look atwhat’s happening down here. There’s a SkyHawk jump jet from Fairchild Field inbound.” He stopped. The automatic cannons were one thing—could the armor withstand against air power likethat? The SkyHawk had a quartet of 50mm cannons that made the chain-guns look like peashooters. They also had Scorpion missiles—designed to take out tanks. Answer: he couldn’t do a thing against it. The Master Chief ran. He had to find cover. He sprinted to the next section of the course: the Pillars ofLoki. It was a forest of ten-meter-tall poles spaced at random intervals. Typically, the poles had booby trapsstrung on, under, and between them—stun grades, sharpened sticks . . . anything the instructors coulddream up. The idea was to teach recruits to move slowly and keep their eyes open. The Master Chief had no time to search for the traps. He climbed up the first pole and balanced on top. He leaped to the next pole, teetered, regained hisbalance—then jumped to the next. His reflexes had to be perfect; he was landing a half ton of man andarmor on a wooden pole ten centimeters in diameter. “Motion tracking is picking up an incoming target at extreme range,” Cortana warned. “Velocity profilematches the SkyHawk, Chief.” He turned—almost lost his balance and had to shift back and forth to keep from falling. There was a doton the horizon, and the faint rumble of thunder. In the blink of an eye, the dot had wings and the Master Chief’s thermal sensors picked up a plume ofjetwash. In seconds, the SkyHawk closed—then opened fire with its 50mm cannons. He jumped. The wooden poles splintered into pulp. They were mowed down like so many blades of grass. The Master Chief rolled, ducked, and flattened himself on the earth. He caught a smattering of roundsand his shield bar drooped to half. Those rounds would have penetrated his old suit instantly. Cortana said, “I calculate we have eleven seconds before the SkyHawk can execute a maximum gee turnand make another pass.” The Master Chief got up and ran through the shattered remains of the poles. Napalm and sonic grenadespopped around him, but he moved so fast he left the worst of the damage in his wake. “They won’t use their cannons next time,” he said. “They didn’t take us out—they’ll try the missiles.” “Perhaps,” Cortana suggested, “we should leave the course. Find better cover.” “No,” he said. “We’re going to win . . . by their rules.” The last leg of the course was a sprint across an open field. In the distance, the Master Chief saw the bellon a tripod. He glanced over his shoulder. The SkyHawk was back and starting its run straight toward him. Even with his augmented speed, even with the MJOLNIR armor—he’d never make it to the bell in time. He’d never make it alive. He turned to face the incoming jet. “I’ll need your help, Cortana,” he said. “Anything,” she whispered. The Master Chief heard nervousness in the AI’s voice. “Calculate the inbound velocity of a Scorpion missile. Factor in my reaction time and the jet’s inboundspeed and distance at launch, and tell me the instant I need to move to sidestep and deflect it with myleft arm.” Cortana paused a heartbeat. “Calculation done. You did say ‘deflect’?” “Scorpion missiles have motion-tracking sensors and proximity detonators. I can’t outrun it. And itwon’t miss. That leaves us very few options.” The SkyHawk dove. “Get ready,” Cortana said. “I hope you know what you’re doing.” “Me, too.” Smoke appeared from the jet’s left wingtip and fire and exhaust erupted as a missile streaked toward him. The Master Chief saw the missile’s track back and forth, zeroing in on his coordinates. A shrill tone inhis helmet warbled—the missile had a guidance lock on him. He chinned a control and the sound diedout. The missile was fast. Faster than he was ten times over. “Now!” Cortana said. They moved together. He shifted his muscles and the MJOLNIR—augmented by his link to Cortana—moved faster than he’d ever moved before. His leg tensed and pushed him aside; his left arm came upand crossed his chest. The head of the missile was the only thing he saw. The air grew still and thickened. He continued to move his hand, palm open in a slapping motion—as fast as he could will his flesh toaccelerate. The tip of the Scorpion missile passed a centimeter from his head. He reached out—fingertips brushed the metal casing——and slapped it aside. The SkyHawk jet screamed over his head. The Scorpion missile detonated. Pressure slammed though his body. The Master Chief flew six meters, spinning end over end, andlanded flat on his back. He blinked, and saw nothing but blackness. Was he dead? Had he lost? The shield status bar in his heads-up display pulsed weakly. It was completely drained—then it blinkedred and slowly started to refill. Blood was spattered across the inside of his helmet and he tasted copper. He stood, his muscles screaming in protest. “Run!” Cortana said. “Before they come back for a look.” The Master Chief got up and ran. As he passed the spot where he had stood to face down the missile, hesaw a two-meter-deep crater. He could feel his Achilles tendon tear, but he didn’t slow. He crossed the half-kilometer stretch inseventeen seconds flat and skidded to halt. The Master Chief grabbed the bell’s cord and rang it three times. The pure tone was the most glorioussound he had ever heard. Over the COM channel Dr. Halsey’s voice broke:“Test concluded. Call off your men, Colonel Ackerson! We’ve won. Well done, Master Chief. Magnificent! Stay there; I’m sending out a recovery team.” “Yes, ma’am,” he replied, panting. The Master Chief scanned the sky for the SkyHawk—nothing. It had gone. He knelt and let blood dripfrom his nose and mouth. He looked down at the bell—and laughed. He knew that stainless-steel dented shape. It was the same one he had rung that first day of boot. Theday Chief Mendez had taught him about teamwork. “Thank you, Cortana,” he finally said. “I couldn’t have done it without you.” “You’re welcome, Master Chief,” she replied. Then, her voice full of mischief, she added: “And no, youcouldn’t have done it without me.” Today he had learned about a new kind of teamwork with Cortana. Dr. Halsey had given him a greatgift. She had given him a weapon with which to destroy the Covenant. Chapter 28 0400 Hours, August 30, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSCPillar of Autumn , in orbit around Epsilon Eridani System, Reach Military ComplexCortana never rested. Although based approximately on a human mind, AIs had no need to sleep ordream. Dr. Halsey had thought she could keep Cortana occupied by checking the systems of thePillar ofAutumn while she attended to her other secret projects. Her assumption was incorrect. While Cortana was intrigued with the unique design and workings of the ship—its preparation barelyoccupied a fraction of her processing power. She watched with thePillar of Autumn ’s camera as Captain Keyes approached the ship in a shuttle pod. Lieutenant Hikowa left to greet him in the docking bay. From C deck, Captain Keyes spoke over the intercom: “Cortana? Can we have power to move the ship? I’d like to get under way.” She calculated the remaining reactor burn-in time and made an adjustment to run it hotter. “The engines’ final shakedown is in theta cycle,” Cortana replied. “Operating well within normal parameters. Divertingthirty percent power to engines; aye, sir.” “And the other systems’ status?” Captain Keyes asked. “Weapons-system check initiated. Navigational nodes functioning. Continuing systemwide shakedownand triple checks, Captain.” “Very good,” he said. “Apprise me if there are any anomalies.” “Aye, Captain,” she replied. The COM channel snapped off. She continued her checks on thePillar of Autumn as ordered. There were, however, more importantthings to consider; namely, a little reconnaissance into ONI databases . . . and a little revenge. She dedicated the balance of her run time toward probing the SATCOM system around REACH forentry points. There. A ping in the satellite network coordination signal. She broadcast a resonant carrierwave at that signal and piggybacked into the system. First things first. She had two loose ends to take care of. While she and the Master Chief had been on the obstacle course, she had commandeered SATCOMobservation beacon 419 and rotated it to view them from orbit. She reentered the back door she had left open in the system, and rewrote the satellite’s guidance thrustersubroutine. If the system was analyzed later, it would be determined that this error had altered it to arandom orientation rather than a planned position. She withdrew, but left her back door intact. This trick might come in handy again. The other loose end that required her attentions was Colonel Ackerson—the man who had tried to eraseher and the Master Chief. Cortana reread Dr. Halsey’s recommended test specifications for the MJOLNIR system on the obstaclecourse. She had suggested live rounds, yes. But never a squad of Orbital drop Shock Troopers, chainguns,Lotus mines . . . and certainly not an air strike. That was the Colonel’s doing. He was an equation that needed to be balanced. What Dr. Halsey mighthave called “payback.” She linked to the UNSC personnel and planning database on Reach. The ONI AI there, Beowulf, knewher . . . and knew not to let her in. Beowulf was thorough, methodical, and paranoid; in her own way,Cortana couldn’t help but like him. But compared with her code-cracking skills, he might as well havebeen an accounting program. Cortana sent a rapid series of queries into the network node that processed housing transfer requests. Anormally quiet node—she overloaded it with a billion different pings per minute. The network attempted to recover and reconfigure, causing all nodes to lag, including node seventeen—personnel records. She stepped in and inserted a spike wedge, a subroutine that looked like a normalincoming signal, but bounced any handshake protocol. She slipped in. The Colonel’s CSV was impressive. He had survived three battles with the Covenant. Early in the war,he received a promotion and volunteered for a dozen black ops. For the last few years, however, hisefforts had focused on political maneuvers rather than battlefield tactics. He had filed several requestsfor increased funding for his Special Warfare projects. No wonder he wanted the Master Chief gone. The Spartan IIs and MJOLNIR were his directcompetition. Worse, they were succeeding where he failed. At best, Ackerson’s actions were treason. But Cortana wasn’t about to reveal all this to the ONIoversight committee. Despite the Colonel’s methods, the UNSC still needed him—and his SpecWarspecialists—in the war. Justice, however, would still be meted out. From the ONI database, she masqueraded as a routine credit check and entered the Colonel’s bankaccount—to which she wired a substantial amount to a brothel on Gilgamesh. She made sure the bankqueries sent to confirm the transaction were copied to his home immediately. Colonel Ackerson was amarried man . . . and his wife should be there to receive them. She cut into his personal E-mail and sent a carefully crafted message—requesting reassignment to aforward area—to personnel. Finally, she inserted a “ghost” record, an electronic footprint that identifiedthe source of the alterations: Ackerson’s personal-computer pad. By the time Ackerson was done untangling all of that, he’d be reassigned to field duty . . . and get backto fighting the Covenant where he belonged. With all loose ends neatly tied up, Cortana rechecked thePillar of Autumn ’s reactor; the shakedown wasproceeding nicely. She tweaked the magnetic-field strength, and part of her watched the output from theengines for fluctuations. She inspected all weapons systems three times, and then went back to her ownpersonal research. She considered how well the Master Chief had performed this morning on the obstacle course. He wasmore than Cortana could have hoped for. The Master Chief was much more than Dr. Halsey or the pressreleases had indicated. He was intelligent . . . not fearless, but as close to it as any human she had encountered. His reactiontime under stress was one-sixth the standard human norm. More than that, however, Cortana had sensedthat he had a certain—she searched her lexicon for the proper word—nobility. He placed his mission andhis duty and honor above his personal safety. She reexamined his Career Service Vitae. He had fought in 207 ground engagements against theCovenant, and been awarded every major service medal except the Prisoner of War Medallion. There were holes in his CSV, though. The standard black-out sections courtesy of ONI, of course . . . butmost curious, all data before he entered active duty had been expunged. Cortana wasn’t about to let a mere erasure stop her. She traced where the order to erase that data hadoriginated. Section Three. Dr. Halsey’s group. Curious. She followed the order pathway—crashed into layers of counter code. The code started a trace on hersignal. She blocked it—and it restarted a trace of the origin of her block. This was a very well-crafted piece of counterintrusion software, far superior to the normal ONIslugcode. If nothing else, Cortana liked a challenge. She withdrew from the database and looked for anunguarded way into ONI Section Three files. Cortana listened to the hum of coded traffic along the surface of ONI’s secure network. There was anunusual amount of packets today: queries and encrypted messages from ONI operatives. She peered intothem and unraveled their secrets as they passed her. There were orders for ship movements andoperatives outbound from Reach. This must be the new directive to send scouts into the peripherysystems and find the Covenant. She saw several ships docked in Reach’s space docks—ONI stealth jobsmade to look like private yachts. They had cute, innocuous names: theApplebee ,Circumference , andtheLark . She spotted something she could use: Dr. Halsey had just entered her laboratory. She was at checkpointthree. The doctor waited as her voice and retina patterns were being scanned. Cortana intercepted and killed the signal. The verification system reset. “Please rescan retina, Dr. Halsey,” the system requested, “and repeat today’s code phrase in a normalvoice.” Before Dr. Halsey could do this, Cortana sent her own files of Dr. Halsey’s retina and voice scans. Shehad long ago copied them and occasionally they came in handy. Section Three verification opened for Cortana. She had only a second before the doctor spoke andoverrode the previous entry access. Cortana, however, was a lightning strike in the system. She entered, searched, and found what shewanted. Every piece of data on SPARTAN 117 was copied to her personal directory within seventymilliseconds. She withdrew from the ONI database, routing all traces of her queries back to her Ackerson “ghost.” She closed all connections and returned to thePillar of Autumn . One quick check of the reactor—yes,operating within normal parameters—and she sent a complete report to Lieutenant Hall on the bridge. Cortana examined the Master Chief’scomplete CSV. She scanned backward through time: hisperformance data on the obstacle course, and the debriefing he had given at ONI headquarters. She paused and pondered the signal the Covenant had sent from Sigma Octanus IV. Intrigued, she triedto translate the sequence. The symbols looked tantalizingly familiar. Every algorithm and variation ofthe standard translation software she attempted, however, failed. Puzzled, she set it aside to examinelater. She continued, absorbing the data from the Master Chief’s files. She learned of the augmentations heand the other Spartans were made to endure; the brutal indoctrination and training they had received;and how he had been abducted at the age of six, and a flash clone used to replace him in an ONI blackop. All of it had been authorized by Dr. Halsey. Cortana paused for a full three processor cycles churning this new data through her ethicssubroutines . . . not comprehending. How could Dr. Halsey, who was so concerned for her Spartans,have done this to them? Of course—because it was necessary. There was no other way to preserve the UNSC against rebellionand Covenant forces. Was Dr. Halsey a monster? Or just doing what had to be done to protect humanity? Perhaps a little ofboth. Cortana erased her stolen files. No matter. Whatever the Master Chief had been through in the past . . . itwas done. He was in Cortana’s care now. She would do everything in her power—short ofcompromising their mission—to make sure nothing ever happened to him again. Chapter 29 0400 Hours, August 30, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSCPillar of Autumn , in orbit around Epsilon Eridani System, Reach Military ComplexCaptain Keyes tapped the thrusters of the shuttle podCoda . The tiny craft rolled and thePillar of Autumncame into view. Normally, Captains did not ferry themselves around the space docks of Reach, but Keyes had insisted. All unauthorized personnel were restricted to a narrow flight path around thePillar of Autumn , and hewanted to take a careful look around the outside of this ship before he took command. From this distance, thePillar of Autumn could have been mistaken for an elongated frigate. As theshuttle pod moved closer, however, details appeared that betrayed the ship’s age. ThePillar of Autumn ’shull had several larger dents and scratches. Her engine baffles were blackened. The portside emergencythrusters were missing. What had he gotten himself into by signing up for Dr. Halsey’s mission? He moved within a hundred meters and circled to the starboard. The shuttle bay on this side was sealedoff. Red-and-yellow hazard warnings had been painted on metal plates that had been hastily welded overher entrance. He closed to ten meters and saw the plate was not a solid sheet of metal—he could see armored ports,heavily reinforced . . . almost solid titanium A. Honeycombed throughout this section were the roundcovers of Archer missile pods. Captain Keyes counted: thirty pods across, ten down. Each pod helddozens of missiles. ThePillar of Autumn had a secret arsenal to rival any real cruiser in the fleet. Captain Keyes drifted toward the stern and noticed concealed and recessed 50mm autocannons fordefense against single ships. Underneath were bumps—part of the linear accelerator system for the ship’s lone MAC gun. It lookedtoo small to be truly effective. But he would reserve judgment. Perhaps, like the rest of thePillar ofAutumn , the weapon was more than it appeared to be. He certainly hoped so. Captain Keyes returned to the port side and drifted gently into the shuttle bay. He took note of threeLongsword single ships and three Pelican dropships in the bay. One of the Pelicans had double thenormal armor plating and what looked like grappling attachments. A serrated titanium ram decorated thedropship’s prow. He touched down on an automated landing platform and locked the controls down. A moment later theshuttle descended belowdecks and was cycled through the airlock. Captain Keyes gathered his duffelbag and stepped onto the flight deck. Lieutenant Hikowa was there to meet him. She saluted. “Welcome aboard, Captain Keyes.” He saluted. “What do you think of her, Lieutenant?” Lieutenant Hikowa’s dark eyes widened. “You’re not going to believe this ship, sir.” Her normallyserious face broke with a smile. “They’ve turned it into something . . . special.” “I saw what they did to my starboard shuttle bay,” Captain Keyes remarked sourly. “That’s just the start,” she said. “I can give you a full tour.” “Please,” Captain Keyes said. He paused at an intercom. “Just one thing first, Lieutenant.” He keyed theintercom. “Ensign Lovell, plot a course to the system’s edge and move thePillar of Autumn on anaccelerating vector. We will jump to Slipstream space as soon as we get there.” “Sir,” Lovell replied. “Our engines are still in shakedown mode.” “Cortana?” Captain Keyes asked. “Can we have power to move the ship? I’d like to get under way.” “The engines’ final shakedown is in theta cycle,” Cortana replied. “Operating well within normalparameters. Diverting thirty percent power to engines; aye, sir.” “And the other systems’ status?” Captain Keyes asked. “Weapons-system check initiated. Navigational nodes functioning. Continuing systemwide shakedownand triple checks, Captain.” “Very good,” he said. “Apprise me if there are any anomalies.” “Aye, Captain,” she replied. “We finally have an AI,” he remarked to Hikowa. “We’ve got more than that, sir,” Hikowa replied. “Cortana is running the shakedown and supervising Dr. Halsey’s modifications to the ship. We have a backup AI to handle point defense.” “Really?” Keyes was surprised; getting a single AI was tough enough these days. Getting two wasunprecedented. “Yes, sir. I’ll see to the initialization of our AI as soon as Cortana is through running her diagnostics.” Captain Keyes had meet Cortana briefly in Dr. Halsey’s office. Although every AI he had met wasbrilliant, Cortana seemed exceptionally qualified. Captain Keyes had posed several navigation problemsand she had figured out all the solutions . . . and had come up with a few options he had not considered. She was somewhat high-spirited, but that was not necessarily a bad thing. Lieutenant Hikowa led him into the elevator and punched the button for D deck. “At first,” Hikowa said, “I was concerned with all the ordnance on board. One penetrating shot and wecould explode like a string of firecrackers. But this ship doesn’t have much empty space—it’s full ofbraces, honeycombed titanium-A, and hydraulic reinforcements that can be activated in an emergency. She can take a tremendous beating, sir.” “Let’s hope we don’t have to test that,” Captain Keyes said. He checked that this pipe was in his pocket. “Yes, sir.” Their elevator passed through the rotating section of the ship and Captain Keyes felt his weight ease anda flutter of vertigo. He grabbed hold of the rails. The doors opened and they entered the cavernous engine room. The ceiling was four stories high,making this the largest compartment in the ship. Catwalks and platforms ringed the hexagonal chamber. “Here’s the new reactor, sir,” Hikowa said. The device perched within a lattice of nonferric ceramic and leaded crystal. The main reactor ring wasnestled in the center of what appeared to be two smaller reactor rings. Technicians floated nearby takingreadings and monitoring the output displays on the walls. “I’m not familiar with this design, Lieutenant.” “The latest reactor technology. ThePillar of Autumn is the first ship to get it. The two smaller fusionreactors come online to supercharge the main reactor. Their overlapping magnetic fields can temporallyboost power by three hundred percent.” Captain Keyes whistled appreciatively as he scrutinized the room. “I don’t see any coolant pipes.” “There are none, sir. This reactor uses a laser-induced optical slurry of ions chilled to near-absolute zeroto neutralize the waste heat. The more we crank up the power, the more juice we have to cool thesystem. It is very efficient.” The smaller reactors flickered to life and Captain Keyes felt the ambient heat in the room jump, thensuddenly cool again. He removed his pipe and tapped it in the palm of his hand. He would have torethink his old tactics. This new engine could give him new options in battle. “There’s more, sir.” Lieutenant Hikowa led him back into the lift. “We have forty fifty-millimeter cannons for point defense,with overlapping fields of fire covering all inbound vectors.” “What is our least defended approach vector?” “Bottom fore,” she said, “along the lay line of the MAC system. There are very few gunnery placementsthere. Transient magnetic bursts tend to magnetize the weapons.” “Tell me about the MAC gun, Lieutenant. It looks under-powered.” “It fires a special light round with a ferrous core, but an outer layer of tungsten carbide. The roundsplinters on impact—like an assault rifle’s shredder rounds.” She was talking so fast she had to pauseand take a deep breath. “This gun has magnetic field recyclers along the length that recapture the fieldenergy. Coupled with booster capacitors, we can firethree successive shots with one charge.” That would be very effective against the Covenant energy shields. The first shot, maybe the first pair ofshots, would take down their shields. The last round would deliver a knockout punch. “I take it you approve, Lieutenant?” “To quote Ensign Lovell, sir, ‘I think I’m in love.’ ” Captain Keyes nodded. “I notice we have several single ships and some Pelican dropships in the bay.” “Yes, sir. One of the Longswords is equipped with a Shiva nuclear warhead. It can be remote-piloted. We also have three HAVOK warheads onboard.” “Of course,” Captain Keyes said. “And the Pelicans? One of them had extra armor.” “The Spartans were working on it. Some sort of boarding craft.” “The Spartans?” Captain Keyes asked. “They’re already onboard?” “Yes, sir. They were here before we got on board.” “Take me to them, Lieutenant.” “Yes, sir.” Lieutenant Hikowa stopped the elevator and hit the button for C deck. Twenty-five years ago Captain Keyes had helped procure the Spartan candidates for Dr. Halsey. She hadsaid they might one day be the best hope the UNSC had for peace. At the time he’d assumed that theDoctor was prone to hyperbole—but it appeared that she’d been correct. That didn’t make what they haddone right, though. His complicity in those kidnappings still haunted him. The elevator doors opened. The primary storage bay had been converted into barracks for the thirtySpartans. Every one of them wore MJOLNIR battle armor. They looked alien to him. Part machine, parttitan—but completely inhuman. The room was filled with motion—Spartans unpacked crates, others cleaned and field-stripped theirassault rifles, and a pair of them practiced hand-to-hand combat. Captain Keyes could barely follow theirmotions. They were so fast, no hesitation. Strike and block and counter-strike—their movements were acontinuous stream of rapid-fire blurs. Captain Keyes had seen the news feeds and heard the rumors, like everyone on in the fleet—theSpartans were near-mythological figures in the military. They were supposed to be super-humansoldiers, invulnerable and indestructible—and it was almost the truth. Dr. Halsey had shown him theiroperational records. Between the Spartans and the refittedPillar of Autumn , Captain Keyes was beginning to believe Dr. Halsey’s long-shot mission might work after all. “Captain on the deck!” one of the Spartans shouted. Every Spartan stopped and snapped to attention. “As you were,” he said. The Spartans relaxed slightly. One turned and strode toward him. “Master Chief SPARTAN 117 reporting as ordered, sir.” The armored giant paused, and for a moment,Keyes thought the Spartan looked uncomfortable. “Sir, I regret the unit was not able to ask yourpermission to come aboard. Admiral Stanforth insisted we keep our presence off the COM channels andcomputer networks.” Captain Keyes found the reflective faceplates of the Spartans’ helmets disconcerting. It was impossibleto read their features. “Quite all right, Master Chief. I just wanted to extend my regards. If you or your men need anything, letme know.” “Yes, sir,” the Master Chief said. An awkward moment of silence passed. Captain Keyes felt like he didn’t belong here—an intruder in avery exclusive club. “Well, Master Chief, I’ll be on the bridge.” “Sir!” The Master Chief saluted. Captain Keyes returned the salute and left with Lieutenant Hikowa. When the elevator doors closed, Lieutenant Hikowa said, “Do you think—I mean with all due respect tothe Spartans, sir—don’t you think they’re . . . strange?” “Strange? Yes, Lieutenant. You might act a little strange if you seen and been through as much as theyhad.” “Some people say they’re not even humans in those suits—that they’re just machines.” “They’re human,” Captain Keyes said. The elevator doors parted and Captain Keyes stepped onto his bridge. It was much smaller than he wasaccustomed to; the command chair was only a meter from the other stations. View screens dominatedthe room, and a massive, curved window afforded a panoramic view of the stars. “Status reports,” Captain Keyes ordered. Lieutenant Dominique spoke first. “Communication systems are green, sir. Monitoring FLEETCOMReach traffic. No new orders.” Dominique had gotten his hair shorn since he had been on theIroquois . He also had a new tattoo around his left wrist: the wavy lines of a Besell function. “Reactor shakedown eighty percent complete,” Lieutenant Hall reported. “Oxygen, power, rotation, andpressure all green lights, sir.” She smiled, but it wasn’t like before—an automatic gesture. She seemedgenuinely happy. Lieutenant Hikowa took her seat and strapped in. She gathered her black hair and tied it into a knot. “Weapons panel shows green, sir. MAC gun capacitors at zero charge.” Ensign Lovell finally reported: “Navigation and sensor systems online, Captain, and all green. Ready foryour orders.” Lovell was completely focused on his station. A small hologram of Cortana flickered on the AI pedestal near navigation. “Engine shakedown runningsmoothly, Captain,” she said. “All personnel onboard. You have half-power now if you wish to movethe ship. Fujikawa-Shaw generators on-line . . . you can take us into the Slipstream at your pleasure.” “Very good,” Captain Keyes said. Keyes surveyed his crew, pleased at how they had sharpened up after Sigma Octanus. Gone were thebleary, haggard expressions, and the tentative, nervous mannerisms. Good, he thought. We’re going to need everyone at the top of their game now. The crew had been briefed on their mission—part of it anyway. Captain Keyes had insisted. They weretold they would be attempting to capture Covenant technology, with an aim to disabling one of thealiens’ ships and bringing it back intact. What the crew didn’t know were the stakes. “Approaching Reach system’s edge,” Ensign Lovell reported. “Ready to generate a Slipstream—” “Captain!” Lieutenant Dominique cried. “Incoming Alpha priority transmission from FLEETCOM HQat Reach . . . sir, they’re under Covenant attack!” Chapter 30 0000 Hours, August 29, 2552 (Military Calendar) / narrow-band point-to-point transmission: origin UNKNOWN; termination: Section Three, Omega secure antenna array, UNSC HQ EpsilonEridani System, Reach Military ComplexPLNBPriority Transmission XX087R-XXEncryption Code:GAMMAPublic Key:N/AFrom:CODENAME:COALMINERTo:CODENAME:SURGEONSubject:PROGRESS REPORT/OPERATIONHYPODERMICClassification:EYES ONLY TOP SECRET (SECTION III X-RAY DIRECTIVE)/file extraction-reconstitution complete//start file/Secured space-dock repair bay. CorvetteCircumference undergoing final stealth upgrades. Shipyardrecords successfully altered. Queries detected from transient AI. Operation deemed AT RISK of being uncovered. As per contingency plan TANGO: ship registration numbers scrambled; hard isolated from docksidecomputer network; counterintrusion software implemented; Alpha security protocols enacted onboard. Just as you called it, sir. Don’t worry—as far as the station computers are concerned,Circumferencenever even existed. /end file//scrambledestructionprocess enabled/PressENTER to continue. Chapter 31 0447 Hours, August 30, 2552 (Military Calendar) /Remote Sensing StationFermion, Epsilon Eridani System’s edgeChief Petty Officer McRobb entered the command center of Remote Sensing StationFermion . Lieutenants (JG) Bill Streeter and David Brightling stood and saluted. He wordlessly returned their salutes. The wall-sized monitors displayed the contents of the last Slipstream probes: multidimensional charts, arainbow of false color enhancements, and a catalog of objects adrift in the alternate space. Some of thenew officers thought the representations looked “pretty.” To Chief McRobb, however, each pixel on the screens represented danger. So many things could hide inmultidimensional space: pirates, black marketers . . . the Covenant. McRobb inspected their duty stations. He double-checked that all programs and hardware were runningwithin UNSC specifications. He ran his hand along the monitors and keypads looking for dust. Theirstations were in tip-top shape. Considering what they were guarding, Reach, anything less than perfection was unacceptable. He madecertain his crew knew it, too. “Carry on,” he said. Since the battle of Sigma Octanus, FLEETCOM had reassigned top people to its Remote SensingStations. Chief McRobb had been pulled from Fort York on the edge of the Inner Colonies. He had spentthe last three months helping his crew brush up on their abstract and complex algebras to interpret theprobe data. “Ready to send out the next set of probes, sir,” Lieutenant Streeter said. “Linear accelerator andSlipspace generators online and charged.” “Set for thirty-second return cycle and launch,” Chief McRobb ordered. “Aye, sir. Probes away, sir. Accelerated and entering the Slipstream.” FLEETCOM didn’t really expect anything to attack the Reach Military Complex. It was the heart of theUNSC military operations. If anything did attack it, the battle would be a short one. There were twentySuper MAC guns in orbit. They could accelerate a three-thousand-ton projectile to point four-tenths thespeed of light—and place that projectile with pinpoint accuracy. If that wasn’t enough to stop aCovenant fleet, there were anywhere from a hundred to a hundred and fifty ships in the system at anygiven time. Chief McRobb knew, though, there had been another military base that was once thought too strong toattack—and the military had paid the price for their lack of vigilance. He wasn’t about to let Reachbecome another Pearl Harbor. Not on his watch. “Probes returning, sir,” Lieutenant Brightling announced. “Alpha reentering normal space in three . . . two . . . one. Scanning sectors. Signal acquired at extraction point minus forty five thousand kilometers.” “Process the signals and send out the recovery drone, Lieutenant.” “Aye, sir. Getting signal lock on—” The Lieutenant squinted at his monitor. “Sir, would you take a lookat this?” “On the board, Lieutenant.” Radar and neutron imager silhouettes appeared on-screen—and filled the display. Chief McRobb hadnever seen anything like it in Slipstream space. “Confirm that the data stream is not corrupted,” the Chief ordered. “I’m estimating that object is threethousand kilometers in diameter.” “Affirmative . . . thirty-two-hundred-kilometer diameter confirmed, sir. Signal integrity is green. We’llhave a trajectory for the planetoid as soon as Beta probe returns.” It was rare for any natural object this large to be in Slipstream space. An occasional comet or asteroidhad been logged—UNSC astrophysicists still weren’t sure how the things got into the alternatedimension. But there had never been anything like this. At least, not since—“Oh my God,” McRobb whispered. Not since Sigma Octanus. “We’re not waiting for Beta probe,” Chief McRobb barked. “We are initiating the Cole Protocol. Lieutenant Streeter, purge the navigational database, and I meanright now . Lieutenant Brightling,remove the safety interlocks on the station’s reactor.” His junior officers hesitated for a moment—then they understood the gravity of their situation. Theymoved quickly. “Initiating viral data scavengers,” Lieutenant Streeter called out. “Dumping main and cache memory.” He turned in his seat, his face white. “Sir, the science library is offline for repairs. It has every UNSCastrophysics journal in it.” “With navigation data on every star within a hundred light-years,” the Chief whispered. “Including Sol. Lieutenant, you get someone down there and destroy that data. I don’t care if they have to hit it with agoddamn sledgehammer—make sure that data is wiped.” “Aye, sir!” Streeter turned to the COM and began issuing frantic orders. “Safety interlocks red on the board,” Lieutenant Brightling reported. His lips pressed into a single whiteline, concentrating. “Beta probe returning, sir, in four . . . three . . . two . . . one. There. Off target onehundred twenty thousand kilometers. Signal is weak. The probe appears to be malfunctioning. Trying toscrub the signal now.” “It’s too much of a coincidence that it’s malfunctioning, Streeter,” the Chief said. “Get FLEETCOM onAlpha channel on the double! Compress and send the duty log.” “Aye, sir.” Lieutenant Streeter’s fingers fumbled with the keypad as he typed—then had to retype thecommand. “Logs sent.” “Beta probe signal on the board,” Lieutenant Brightling reported. “Calculating the object’s trajectory . . . ” The planetoid was closer. Its edges, however, had abnormalities—bumps and spikes and protrusions. Chief McRobb shifted and clenched his hands into fists. “It will pass though Reach System,” Lieutenant Brightling said. “Intersecting the solar plane inseventeen seconds at the system’s outer edge at zero four one.” He inhaled sharply. “Sir, that’s only alight-second away from us.” Lieutenant Streeter stood and knocked over his chair, almost backing into the Chief. McRobb righted the chair. “Sit down, Lieutenant. We’ve got a job to do. Target the telescope array tomonitor that region of space.” Lieutenant Streeter turned and gazed into the rock-solid features of the Chief. He took a deep breath. “Yes, sir.” He sat back down. “Aye, sir, moving the array.” “Gamma probe returning in three . . . two . . . one.” Lieutenant Brightling paused. “There’s no signal, sir. Scanning. Time plus four seconds and counting. Probe may have translated on a temporal axis.” “I don’t think so,” the Chief murmured. Lieutenant Streeter said, “Telescope array now on target, sir. On the main view screen.” Pinpoints of green light appeared at the edge of the Reach solar system. They collected and swarmed asif they were caught in a boiling liquid. Space stretched, smeared, and distorted. Half the stars in thatregion were blotted out. “Radar contact,” Lieutenant Brightling said. “Contact with . . . more than three hundred large objects.” His hands started to shake. “Sir, silhouettes match known Covenant profiles.” “They’re accelerating,” Lieutenant Streeter whispered. “On an intercept course for the station.” “FLEETCOM network connections are being infiltrated,” Lieutenant Brightling said. His tremblinghands could barely type in commands. “Cutting our connection.” Chief McRobb stood as straight as he could. “What about the astrophysics data?” “Sir, they’re still trying to end the diagnostic cycle, but that takes a few minutes.” “Then we don’t have a lot of options,” McRobb muttered. He set his hand on Lieutenant Brightling’s shoulder to steady the young officer. “It’s all right,Lieutenant. We’ve done the best we could. We’ve done our duty. There’s nothing more to worry about.” He set his palmprint on the control station. The Chief locked out the reactor safeties and saturated thefusion chamber with their deuterium reserve tanks. Chief McRobb said, “Just one last order to carry out.” Chapter 32 0519 Hours, August 30, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSCPillar of Autumn , Epsilon Eridani System’s edgeSomething was wrong. John felt it in his stomach first: a slight lateral acceleration—that became a spin strong enough that hehad to brace his legs. ThePillar of Autumn was turning. Every other Spartan in the storage bay felt it as well; they paused as they unloaded equipment fromcrates and readied the cryo tubes for their journey. The lateral motion slowed and stopped. ThePillar of Autumn ’s engines rumbled like thunder throughthe hull of the ship. Kelly approached him. “Sir? I thought we were accelerating to enter Slipspace?” “So did I. Have Fred and Joshua continue to prep the tubes. Have Linda get a team and secure our gear. I’ll find out what’s going on.” “Aye, sir.” The Master Chief marched toward the intercom panel. He hated being on spaceships. The lack of controlwas disturbing. He and the other Spartans were just extra cargo in a space battle. He hesitated as he reached for the intercom. If Captain Keyes was involved in some tricky maneuver orengaging an enemy, the last thing he needed was an interruption. He pressed the button. “Cortana? We’ve changed course. Is there a problem?” Instead of her voice, however, Captain Keyes spoke over the channel: “Captain Keyes to Spartan 117.” He replied, “Here, sir.” “There’s been a change in plans,” Keyes said. There was a long pause. “This will be easier to explainface-to-face. I’m on my way down to brief you. Keyes out.” John turned and the other Spartans snapped to their tasks. Those without specific orders checked andrechecked their weapons and assembled their combat gear. They had all heard the Captain, however. The sound receivers in their armor could pick up a whisper at ahundred meters. And the Spartans didn’t have to be told this was trouble. John clicked on the monitor near the intercom. The fore camera showed thePillar of Autumn had indeedturned about. Reach’s sun blazed in the center of the screen. They were heading back. Was something wrong with the ship? No. Captain Keyes wouldn’t be coming to brief him if that was thecase. There was definitely a snag. The elevator doors opened and Captain Keyes stepped off the lift. “Captain on the deck!” the Master Chief shouted. The Spartans stood at attention. “At ease,” Captain Keyes said. The expression on the Captain’s face suggested that “ease” was the lastthing on his mind. He smoothed his thumb over the antique pipe the Master Chief had seen him carry. “There is something very wrong,” Keyes said. He glanced at the other Spartans. “Let’s talk in private,” he told the Master Chief in a low voice. He walked to the monitor over the intercom. “Sir,” the Master Chief said. “Unless you wish to leave the deck, the Spartans will hear everything wesay.” Keyes looked at the Spartans and frowned. “I see. Very well, your squad might as well hear this now,too. I don’t know how they found Reach—they bypassed a dozen Inner Colony worlds to get here. Itdoesn’t matter. Theyare here. And we have to do something.” “Sir? ‘They’?” “The Covenant.” He turned to the intercom. “Cortana, display the last priority Alpha transmission.” A communiqué flickered on screen, and the Master Chief read: United Nations Space Command ALPHA PRIORITY TRANSMISSION 04592Z-83Encryption Code:RedPublic Key:file /bravo-tango-beta-five/From:Admiral Roland Freemont, Commanding Fleet Officer, FLEETCOM Sector One Commander/(UNSC Service Number: 00745-16778-HS)To:ALL UNSC warships in REACH, JERICO, and TANTALUS systemsSubject:IMMEDIATE RECALLClassification:Classified (BGX Directive)/start file/Covenant presence detected on REACH system’s edge coordinates 030 relative. All UNSC warships are hereby ordered to cease all activities and regroup at rally pointZULU at bestspeed. ALL SHIPSare to enact the Cole Protocol immediately. /end file/“Cortana has picked up ship signatures on thePillar of Autumn ’s sensors,” Captain Keyes said. “Shecannot be sure how many because of electrical interference, but there are more than a hundred alienships inbound toward Reach. We have to go. We have our orders. The Section Three mission has to bescrubbed.” “Sir? Scrubbed?” John had never had a mission canceled. “Reach is our strategic headquarters and our biggest ship-building facility, Master Chief. If the shipyardsfall, then Dr. Halsey’s prediction of humanity having only months to survive will shrink to weeks.” The Master Chief normally would never have contradicted a superior officer, but this time dutycompelled him. “Sir, our two missions are not mutually exclusive.” Captain Keyes lit his pipe—in defiance of three separate regulations of igniting a combustible on aUSNC ship. He puffed once and thoughtfully examined the smoke. “What do you have in mind, MasterChief?” “A hundred alien vessels, sir. Between the combined force of the fleet and Reach’s orbital gunplatforms, it is almost guaranteed there will be a disabled ship my squad can board and capture.” Captain Keyes mulled this over. “There will also be hundreds of ships exchanging fire with one another. Missiles, nukes . . . Covenant plasma torpedoes.” “Just get us close enough,” the Master Chief said. “Punch a hole in their shields long enough for us toget on their hull. We’ll do the rest.” Captain Keyes chewed on his pipe. He tucked it into the cup of his hand. “There are operationalcomplications with your plan. Cortana has been running thePillar of Autumn ’s shakedown. We have ourown AI, but by the time we get it initialized and running this ship—the battle may be over.” “I see, sir.” Captain Keyes gazed a moment at the Master Chief, then sighed. “If there is a disabled Covenant shipand if we are close enough to itand if we’re not blown to a million bits by the time we get there, then I’lltransfer Cortana to you. I’ve flown ships without an AI before.” Captain Keyes managed a weak smile,but it quickly disappeared. “Yes, sir!” “We’ll be at rally point Zulu in twenty minutes, Master Chief. Have your team ready by then . . . foranything.” “Sir.” He saluted. Captain Keyes returned the salute and entered the elevator, puffing on his pipe and shaking his head. The Master Chief turned to his teammates. They halted what they were doing. “You all heard. This is it. Fred and James, I want to you to refit one of our Pelicans. Get every scrap ofC-12 and shape a charge on her nose. If Captain Keyes downs a Covenant shield, we may have to blastour way into the ship’s hull.” Fred and James replied, “Aye, sir.” “Linda, assemble a team and get into every crate ONI packed for us—distribute that gear ASAP. Makesure everyone gets a thruster pack, plenty of ammo, grenades, and Jackhammer launchers if we havethem. If we do get on board, we may encounter those armored Covenant types again—this time I wantthe firepower to take them out.” “Yes, sir!” The Spartans scrambled to make ready for the mission. The Master Chief approached Kelly. On a private COM channel, he told her, “Crate thirteen on themanifest has three HAVOK nuclear mines. Get them. I have the arming cards. Ready them for transport.” “Affirmative.” She paused. The Master Chief couldn’t see her face past the reflective shield of her helmet, but he knew her wellenough to know that the tiny slump of her shoulders meant that she was worried. “Sir?” she said. “I know this mission will be tough, but . . . do you ever get the feeling that this is likeone of Chief Mendez’s missions? Like there’s a trick . . . some twist that we’ve overlooked?” “Yes,” he replied. “And I’m waiting for it.” Chapter 33 0534 Hours, August 30, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSCPillar of Autumn , Epsilon Eridani SystemThePillar of Autumn detonated its port emergency thrusters. The ship slid out of the path of the asteroid,missing it by ten meters——The Covenant plasma trailing them did not. It impacted the city-sized rock and sent fountains ofmolten iron and nickel spewing into space. Nine of the ten teardrop-shaped Covenant fighters—nicknamed “Seraphs” by ONI—dodged the asteroidas well. The tenth ship slammed into the asteroid and vanished from the bridge’s view screen. The other single ships accelerated and swarmed around thePillar of Autumn , harassing her with pulselaser fire. “Cortana,” Captain Keyes said, “activate our point defense system.” ThePillar of Autumn ’s 50mm cannons flashed—chipping away at the Covenant ships’ shields. “Already engaged, Captain,” Cortana said calmly. “Ensign Lovell,” Captain Keyes said. “Engines all stop and bring us about one hundred eighty degrees. Lieutenant Hikowa, ready our MAC gun and arm Archer missile pods A1 through A7. I want a firingsolution that has our Archer missiles hitting with the third MAC round.” “On it, sir,” Lieutenant Hikowa replied. “Aye, sir,” Ensign Lovell said. “Answering engines all stop. Coming about. Brace yourselves.” ThePillar of Autumn ’s engines sputtered and died. Navigational thrusters fired and rotated the ship toface the real threat—a Covenant carrier. The enormous alien craft had materialized aft of thePillar of Autumn and launched their single ships. The carrier had then launched two salvos of plasma—which Captain Keyes had only shaken by enteringthe asteroid field. Cortana maneuvered the massivePillar of Autumn like it was a sporting yacht; she nimbly dodgedtumbling rocks, used them to screen Covenant plasma and pulse laser bolts. But thePillar of Autumn would emerge from the asteroid field in twenty seconds. “Firing solution online, sir,” Lieutenant Hikowa said. “MAC gun hot and missile safety interlocksremoved. Ready to launch.” “Fire missiles at will, Lieutenant.” Rapid-fire thumps echoed though thePillar of Autumn ’s hull and a swarm of Archer missiles spedtoward the incoming carrier. “MAC gun is hot,” Hikowa said. “Booster capacitors ready. Firing in eight seconds, sir.” “I must make one small adjustment to your trajectory, Lieutenant,” Cortana said. “Covenant single shipsare concentrating their attacks on our underside. Captain? With your permission?” “Granted,” Keyes said. “Firing solution recalculated,” Cortana said. “Hang on.” Cortana fired thrusters and thePillar of Autumn rotated belly up—brought the majority of her 50mmcannons to bear on the Covenant Seraph fighters underneath her. Overlapping fields of fire wore down their shields—punctured their armored hulls with a thousandrounds, tore through the pilots with a hail of projectiles, and peppered their reactors. Nine puffs of firedropped behind thePillar of Autumn and vanished into the darkness. “Enemy single ships destroyed,” Cortana said. “Approaching firing position.” “Cortana, give me a countdown. Lieutenant Hikowa, fire on my mark.” Captain Keyes said. “Ready to fire, aye,” Lieutenant Hikowa said. Cortana nodded; her trim figure projected in miniature inside the bridge holotank. As she nodded, a timedisplay appeared, the numbers counting down rapidly. Keyes gripped the edge of the command chair, his eyes glued to the countdown. Three seconds, two,one . . . “Mark.” “Firing!” Hikowa answered. A triple flash of lightning saturated the forward view screen and bled in from the viewport; three whitehotprojectiles crossed the black distance between thePillar of Autumn and the Covenant carrier. Along the side of the carrier, motes of light collected as they rebuilt the charges of their plasma weapons. Archer missiles were pinpoints of exhaust in the distance; the carrier’s pulse lasers fired and melted athird of the incoming missiles. ThePillar of Autumn rolled to starboard and dove. Captain Keyes floated in free fall for a heartbeat, then landed awkwardly on the deck. The crenellatedsurface of an asteroid appeared on their port camera—meters away—then vanished. Captain Keyes was grateful that he never had time to initialize thePillar of Autumn ’s AI. Cortanaperformed superbly. The trio of blazing MAC rounds struck the carrier. The shield flashed once, twice. The third round gotthrough—gutting the ship from stem to stern. The carrier spun sideways. Her shields stuttered once, trying to reestablish a protective screen. Ahundred Archer missiles struck, cratered the hull, blossomed into fire and sparks and smoldering metal. The alien carrier listed and crashed into the asteroid thePillar of Autumn had just narrowly avoided. Itstuck there, hull broken and cracked. Columns of fire blossomed from the shattered vessel. Captain Keyes sighed. A victory. The Spartans, however, would not be taking that ship into Covenant space. It wasn’t going anywhere. “Cortana, mark the location of the destroyed ship and the asteroid. We may have a chance to salvage herlater.” “Yes, Captain.” “Ensign Lovell,” Captain Keyes said, “turn us around and give me best speed to rally point Zulu.” Lovell tapped the thrusters and rotated thePillar of Autumn to relative space normal with Reach. Therumble of the engines shook the decks as the ship accelerated in-system. “ETA twenty minutes at best speed, sir.” The battle for Reach could be over by the time he got there. Captain Keyes wished he could movethrough Slipspace for short, precision jumps like the Covenant. That carrier had materialized a kilometerbehind thePillar of Autumn . If he had that kind of accuracy, he could be at the rally point now—and beof some use. Any attempt to jump in-system, however, would be foolish at best. At worst, it would be afatal move. Jump targets varied by hundreds of thousands of kilometers. Theoretically, they couldreenter normal spaceinside Reach’s sun. “Cortana, give me maximum magnification on the fore cameras.” “Aye sir,” she said. The view on the forward screen zoomed in—jumped and refocused on planet Reach. Twenty thousand kilometers from the planet, a cluster of a hundred UNSC ships collected at rally pointZulu: destroyers, frigates, three cruisers, two carriers—and three refit and repair stations hovering overthem . . . waiting to be used as sacrificial shields. “Fifty-two additional UNSC warships inbound to rally point Zulu,” Cortana reported. “Shift focus to section four by four on-screen, Cortana. Show me those Covenant forces.” The scene blinked and transferred to the approaching Covenant fleet. There were so many ships CaptainKeyes couldn’t estimate their numbers. “How many?” he asked. “I count three hundred fourteen Covenant ships, Captain,” Cortana replied. Captain Keyes couldn’t tear his gaze away from the ships. The UNSC only won battles with theCovenant when they outnumbered the enemy forces three to one . . . not the other way around. They had one advantage: the MAC orbital guns around Reach—the UNSC’s most powerful nonnuclearweapon. Some called them “Super” MAC guns or the “big stick.” Their linear accelerator coils were larger than a UNSC cruiser. They propelled a three-thousand-tonprojectile at tremendous speed, and could reload within five seconds. They drew power directly from thefusion reactor complex planetside. “Pull back the camera angle, Cortana. Let me see the entire battle area.” The Covenant ships accelerated toward Reach. The fleet at rally point Zulu fired their MAC guns andmissiles. The orbital Super MAC guns opened fire as well—twenty streaks of white hot metal burnedacross the night. The Covenant answered by launching a salvo of plasma torpedoes at the orbital guns—so much fire inspace that it looked like a solar flare. Deadly arcs of flame and metal raced through space and crossed paths. The engines of the three refit stations flared to life and the platelike ships moved toward the path of theflaming vapor. A plasma bolt caught the edge of the leading station—fire splashed over its flat surface. More bolts hit,and the station melted, sagged, and boiled. The metal glowed red, then white-hot, tinged with blue. The other two stations maneuvered into position and shielded the orbital guns from the fiery assault. Plasma torpedoes collided with them and sprayed plumes of molten metal into space. After a dozen hits,clouds of ionizing metal enveloped the place where the three stations had been. They had been vaporized. The last of the Covenant plasma hit the haze—scattered, absorbed, and made the cloud glow a hellishorange. Meanwhile, the fleet’s opening salvo and the Super MAC rounds hit the Covenant fleet. The smaller ship-based MAC rounds bounced off the Covenant shields—it took three or more to wearthem down. The Super MAC rounds, however, were another story. The first Super MAC shell hit a Covenantdestroyer. The ship’s shield flashed and vanished—the remaining impact momentum transferred to theship—the hull rippled and shattered into a million fragments. Four nuclear mines detonated in the center of the Covenant fleet. Dozens of ships with downed shieldsflared white and dissolved. The other ships however, shrugged off the damage; their shields burned brilliant silver, then cooled. The surviving Covenant vessels advanced in-system—a third of their number were left behind . . . burning radioactive hulks or utterly destroyed by the Super MAC rounds. Plasma charges collected on the lateral lines of the Covenant ships. They fired. Fingers of deadly energyreached across space . . . toward the UNSC fleet. One Covenant ship sat in the center of the pack, a gigantic vessel, larger than three UNSC cruisers. White-blue beams flashed from its prow—a split second later five UNSC vessels detonated. “Cortana . . . what the hell was that?” Keyes asked. “Lovell, push those engine superchargers as hot asyou can make them.” “Running at three hundred ten percent, sir,” Lovell reported. “ETA fourteen minutes.” “Replaying and digitally enhancing video record,” Cortana said. She split the screen and zoomed in on the huge Covenant ship, replaying the video as the large shipfired. The Covenant energy beams looked like pulse lasers . . . but tinged silver white, the samescintillation effect that they’d seen when their shields were hit. Cortana switched back to view the doomed UNSC destroyerMinotaur . The lance of energy was needlethin. It struck the vessel on A deck, aft, near the reactor. Cortana pulled the view back and slowed therecord frame by frame—the beam punctured through the entire ship, emanating below H deck by theengines. “It drilled through every deck and both sets of battleplate,” Captain Keyes murmured. The beam moved through theMinotaur , slicing a ten-meter-wide swath. “Projected beam path cut through theMinotaur ’s reactors,” Cortana said. “A new weapon,” Captain Keyes said. “Faster than their plasma. Deadlier, too.” The large Covenant ship veered off course and accelerated away from the battle. Perhaps it didn’t wantto risk getting too close to their orbital MAC guns. Whatever the reason, Keyes was grateful to see itwithdraw. The UNSC forces slowly scattered. Some launched missiles to intercept the plasma torpedoes, but thehigh-energy explosives did nothing to the stop the superheated bolts. Fifty UNSC ships went up likeflares, burning, exploding, falling toward the planet. The orbital Super MAC guns fired—sixteen hits and sixteen Covenant ships were blasted into flame andglittering fragments. The Covenant fleet split into two groups: half accelerated to engage the dispersing UNSC fleet; theremainder of their ships arced upward relative to the plane of the system. That group maneuvered to geta clear shot around the cloud of vaporized titanium from the refit stations. They were going to target theorbital guns. Plasma charges collected along their sides. The orbital guns fired. The super-heavy rounds tore through the clouds of ionized metal vapor, leavingwhorls and spirals in the haze. They impacted eighteen incoming Covenant ships—ripped through themlike tinfoil, with enough momentum to pulverize their hulls. Six Covenant ships cleared the interfering cloud of vapor. They had a clear shot. The Super MAC guns fired again. Plasma erupted from the sides of the nearby Convent ships. The Super MAC rounds hit the vessels and obliterated the enemy. The streams of plasma, however, had already launched. They streaked toward the orbital guns—impacted and turned the installations into showers of sparks and molten metal. When the haze cleared, fifteen of the Super MAC orbital installations remained intact . . . five had beenvaporized. The Covenant ships engaging the fleet turned and fled on an out-system vector. The remaining UNSC ships did not pursue. “Incoming orders, sir,” Lieutenant Dominique called out. “We’re being ordered to fall back andregroup.” Keyes nodded. “Cortana,” he said, “can you give me damage and casualty estimates for the fleet?” Her tiny holo image coalesced in the display tank. “Yes, Captain,” she said. She cocked an eyebrow athim. “Are you sure you want the bad news?” Damage estimates scrolled across his personal screen. They had taken heavy losses—an estimated twenty ships remained. Nearly one hundred shattered andburning UNSC vessels floated, lifeless, in the combat area. Captain Keyes realized that he was holding his breath. He exhaled. “That was too close,” he murmured. “It could have been closer, Captain,” Cortana whispered. He watched the retreating Covenant. Once again—it was too easy. No . . . it had been anything but“easy” for the UNSC forces, but the Covenant were certainly giving up far earlier than in any previousbattle. The aliens had never stopped once they engaged an enemy. Except at Sigma Octanus, he thought. “Cortana,” Captain Keyes said. “Scan the poles of planet Reach and filter out the magnetic interference.” The view screen snapped to the Reach’s northern pole. Hundreds of Covenant dropships streamedtoward the planet’s surface. “Get FLEETCOM HQ online,” he ordered Lieutenant Dominique. “Copy this message to the FleetCommander, as well.” “Aye, sir,” Lieutenant Dominique said. “Channel connected.” “Tell them they’re being invaded. Dropships inbound at both poles.” Dominique sent the message, listened a moment, then reported, “Message received and acknowledged,sir.” The Super MAC guns pivoted and fired—shattering dozens of the Covenant dropships in the shells’ supersonic wake. The remains of the UNSC fleet split into two groups, moving toward either pole. Missiles and MACguns fired and blasted the dropships to bits. The poles were punctuated with thousands of meteoroids asthe bits of hull burned up in the atmosphere. Hundreds must have gotten through, Keyes thought. Reach had been invaded. “Incoming distress signal from FLEETCOM HQ planetside, sir,” Lieutenant Dominique said, his voicebreaking. “On speakers,” Captain Keyes said. “There are thousands of them. Grunts, Jackals, and their warrior Elites.”The transmission broke intostatic.“They have tanks and fliers. Christ, they’ve breached the perimeter. Fall back! Fall back! Ifanyone can hear this: the Covenant is groundside. Massing near the armory . . . they’re—” White noisefilled the speakers. Captain Keyes winced as he heard screams, bones snapping, an explosion. Thetransmission went dead. “Sir!” Lieutenant Hall said. “The Covenant fleet has altered their outbound trajectory. . . . they’returning.” She rotated to face the Captain. “They’re coming in for another attack.” Captain Keyes stood straighter and smoothed his uniform. “Good.” He addressed the crew in the calmestvoice he could muster. “Looks like we’re not too late after all.” Ensign Lovell nodded. “Sir, ETA to rally point Zulu in five minutes.” “Remove all missile safety locks,” Captain Keyes ordered. “Get our remote-piloted Longsword into thelaunch tube. And make sure our MAC gun capacitors and boosters are hot.” Captain Keyes pulled out his pipe. He lit it and puffed. The Covenant were, of course, after the orbital guns. Their suicidal frontal charge—while almosteffective enough—had been just another diversion. The real danger was on the ground; if their troopstook out the fusion generators, the Super MAC guns would be so much floating junk in orbit. “This is bad,” he muttered to himself. Cortana appeared on the AI pedestal near the NAV station. “Captain Keyes, I’m picking up anotherdistress signal. It’s from the Reach space dock AI. And if you think this—” she gestured at the incomingCovenant fleet on screen “—is bad, wait until you hear this. It gets worse.” Chapter 34 0558 Hours, August 30, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSCPillar of Autumn , Epsilon Eridani SystemThe mission had just encountered another snag. It never entered the Master Chief’s mind that he would fail to achieve his objectives. He had to succeed. Failure meant death for not only himself, but for all the Spartans . . . every human. He stood at the view screen in the cargo bay and reread the priority Alpha transmission Captain Keyeshad sent down: Alpha priority channel: To Fleet Admiralty from REACH Space Dock Quartermaster AI8575(a. k.a. Doppler) //triple-encryption time-stamped public key: red rover red rover//start file/IMMEDIATE ACTION REQUIREDItem:Covenant data invasion packets detected penetrating firewall of REACH DOC NET. Counterintrusion software enacted. Resolution: 99.9 percent certainty of neutralization. Item:Initialization of triple-screening protocol discovered the corvetteCircumference /Bay Gamma-9/isolated from REACH DOC NET. Item:Covenant ships detected on inbound Slipstream vector intersecting Bay Gamma-9. Conclusion:Unsecured navigation data on theCircumference detected by Covenant forces. Conclusion: VIOLATION OF THE COLE PROTOCOL. IMMEDIATE ACTION REQUIRED. /end file/He replayed the distress call from Reach’s groundside FLEETCOM HQ. “ . . . They’ve breached the perimeter. Fall back! Fall back! If anyone can hear this: the Covenant isgroundside. Massing near the armory . . . they’re—” The Master Chief copied these files and sent them over his squad’s COM channel. They had a right toknow everything, too. There was only one reason the Covenant would launch a ground invasion: to take out the planetarydefense generators. If they succeeded, Reach would fall. And there was only one reason why the Covenant wanted the shipCircumference —to plunder its NAVdatabase—and find every human world, including Earth. Captain Keyes appeared on the view screen. He held his pipe in one hand, squeezing it so tight hisknuckles were white. “Master Chief, I believe the Covenant will use a pinpoint Slipspace jump to aposition just off the space dock. They may try to get their troops on the station before the Super MACguns can take out their ships. This will be a difficult mission, Chief. I’m . . . open to suggestions.” “We can take care of it,” the Master Chief replied. Captain Keyes’ eyes widened and he leaned forward in his command chair. “How exactly, MasterChief?” “With all due respect, sir, Spartans are trained to handle difficult missions. I’ll split my squad. Three willboard the space dock and make sure that NAV data does not fall into the Covenant’s hands. Theremainder of the Spartans will go groundside and repel the invasion forces.” Captain Keyes considered this. “No, Master Chief, it’s too risky. We’ve got to make sure the Covenantdoesn’t get that NAV data. We’ll use a nuclear mine, set it close to the docking ring, and detonate it.” “Sir, the EMP will burn out the superconductive coils of the orbital guns. And if you use thePillar ofAutumn ’s conventional weapons, the NAV database may still survive. If the Covenant search thewreckage—they may obtain the data.” “True,” Keyes said, and tapped his pipe thoughtfully on his chin. “Very well, Master Chief. We’ll gowith your suggestion. I’ll plot a course over the docking station. Ready your Spartans and prep twodropships. We’ll launch you—” he consulted with Cortana “—in five minutes.” “Aye, Captain. We’ll be ready.” “Good luck,” Captain Keyes said, and snapped off the view screen. Luck. The Master Chief always had been lucky. He’d need luck more than ever this time. He turned to face the Spartans . . . his Spartans. They stood at attention. Kelly stepped forward. “Master Chief sir, permission to lead the space op, sir.” “Denied,” he said. “I’ll be leading that one.” He appreciated her gesture. The space operation would be ten times more dangerous than the ground op. The Covenant would outnumber them ten to one—or more—but the Spartans were used to taking thefight against numerically superior enemies. They had always won on the ground. The extraction of theCircumference database, however, would be in vacuum and zero gravity—and theymight have to fight their way past a Covenant warship to reach the objective. Not exactly idealconditions. “Linda and James,” he said. “You’re with me. Fred, you’re Red Team Leader. You’ll have tacticalcommand of the ground operation.” “Sir!” Fred shouted. “Yes, sir.” “Now make ready,” he said. “We don’t have much time left.” The Master Chief regretted his unfortunate choice of words. The Spartans stood a moment. Kelly called out, “Attention!” They snapped to and gave the Master Chiefa crisp salute. He stood straighter and returned their salute. He was intensely proud of them all. The Spartans scattered and gathered their gear, racing for the dropship bay. The Master Chief watched them go. This was the mission the Spartans had been tempered for in mission after mission. It would be theirfinest moment . . . but he knew that it might also be their last moment. Chief Mendez had said that a leader would be required to spend the lives of those under his command. The Master Chief knew he would lose comrades today—but would their deaths serve a necessarypurpose . . . or would they be wasted? Either way, they were ready. John tapped the thrusters and rotated the Pelican dropship 180 degrees. He pushed the engines to fullpower to brake their forward momentum. ThePillar of Autumn had dropped them while she had beencruising at one-third full speed. They’d need every millimeter of the ten thousand kilometers between them and the docking station toslow down. The Master Chief had taken the Spartan’s modified Pelican, rigged with explosives. The station wouldbe locked down—every airlock sealed. They’d have to blast their way in. He glanced aft. Linda checked one of the three sniper rifle variants she had brought. James inspected histhruster pack. He had picked Linda because no other single Spartan was as efficient at long-range combat. And that’swhat the Master Chief wanted:long -range combat. If it came to hand-to-hand combat in zero gee withhordes of Covenant troopers . . . even his luck wouldn’t hold out too long. He had picked James because James had never quit. Even when his hand had been burned off, he hadshrugged off the shock—at least for a while—and helped them dispatch the Covenant behemoths onSigma Octanus IV. The Master Chief would need that kind of determination on this mission. He took a long look out the front of the Pelican. Their sister dropship initiated a burn and hurtled towardReach. Kelly, Fred, Joshua . . . all of them. Part of him longed to join them in the ground action. The radar panel blinked a proximity warning; the Pelican was one thousand kilometers from the dockingring. The Master Chief tapped the thrusters to align the dropship. He squelched the proximity alert. The alert immediately re-sounded. Strange. He reached for the squelch again—then stopped as he sawthe space around the Pelican change. Motes of green light appeared, pinpoints at first, which swelled likebruises on velvet black space. The green smears lengthened, compressed, and distorted the stars. —a Slipstream entry point. The Master Chief cut the Pelican’s engines, slowing them for impact. A Covenant frigate materialized a kilometer from the dropship’s nose. Its prow filled their view screen. Chapter 35 0616 Hours, August 30, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSC Pelican dropship, Epsilon Eridani System near Reach Station Gamma“Brace for maneuvering!” the Master Chief barked. The Spartans dove for safety harnesses and strapped in. “All secure!” Kelly shouted. The Master Chief killed the Pelican’s forward thrusters and triggered a short, sudden reverse burn. TheSpartans were brutally slammed forward into their harnesses as the Pelican’s acceleration bled away. The Master Chief quickly shut down the engines. The tiny Pelican faced the Covenant frigate. At a kilometer’s distance, the alien ship’s launch bay andpulse laser turrets looked close enough to touch on the view screen; enough firepower to vaporize theSpartans in the blink of an eye. The Master Chief’s first instinct was to fire their HE Anvil-II missiles and autocannons—but he checkedhis hand as he reached for the triggers. That would only attract their attention . . . which was the last thing he wanted. For the moment, the alienvessel ignored them—probably because the Master Chief had shut down the Pelican’s engines. But theship also seemed dead in space: no lights, no single ships launched, and no plasma weapons charging. The dropship continued toward the docking station, their momentum putting distance between them andthe frigate. Space around the Covenant ship boiled and pulled apart—and two more alien ships appeared. They, too, ignored the dropship. Was it too small to bother with? The Master Chief didn’t care. His luck,it seemed, was holding. He checked the radar—thirty kilometers to the docking ring. He ignited the engines to slow them down. He had to or they would crash into the station. Twenty kilometers. Rumbling shook the dropship. They slowed—but it wasn’t going to be enough. Ten kilometers. “Hang on,” he told Linda and James. The sudden impact whiplashed the Master Chief back and forth in his seat. The straps holding himsnapped. He blinked . . . saw only blackness. His vision cleared and he noted that his shield bar was dead. Itslowly began to fill again. Every display and monitor in the cockpit had shattered. The Master Chief shook off the disorientation and pulled himself aft. The interior of the dropship was a mess. Everything tied down had come loose. Ammunition boxes hadbroken open in the crash landing and loose carriages filled the air. Coolant leaked, spraying blobs ofblack fluid. In zero gravity, everything looked like the inside of a shaken snowglobe. James and Linda floated off the deck of the Pelican. They slowly moved. “Any injuries?” the Master Chief asked. “No,” Linda replied. “I think so,” James said. “I mean, no. I’m good, sir. Was that a landing or did those Covenant ships takea shot at us?” “If they had, we wouldn’t be here to talk about it. Get whatever gear you can and get out, double time,” the Master Chief said. The Master Chief grabbed an assault rifle and a Jackhammer launcher. He found a satchel. Inside was akilogram of C-12, detonators, and a Lotus antitank mine. Those would come in handy. He salvaged fiveintact clips of ammunition but couldn’t locate his thruster pack. He’d have to do without one. “No more time,” he said. “We’re sitting ducks here. Out the side hatch now.” Linda went first. She paused, and—once she was satisfied the Covenant weren’t lying in ambush—motioned them forward. The Master Chief and James exited, clung to the side of the Pelican in zero gravity, and took flankingpositions at the fore and aft ends of the dropship. Space dock Gamma was a three-kilometer-diameter ring. Dull gray metal arced in either direction. Onthe surface were communications dishes and a few conduits—no real cover. The docking bay doorswere sealed tight. The station wasn’t spinning. The dockmaster AI must have shut the place up tightwhen it detected the unsecured NAV database. The Master Chief frowned when he spotted the tail end of their Pelican—crumpled and embedded intothe station’s hull. Its engines were ruined. The dropship jutted out at an angle; its prow and the chargesof C-12 that were supposed to have blasted them into a Covenant ship—now pointed into the air. The Master Chief started to drift off the station. He clipped himself to the hull of the dropship. “Blue-Two,” he said, “police those explosives.” He gestured to the prow. The motion sent him gyrating. “Yes, sir.” James puffed his thruster pack once and drifted up to the nose of the Pelican. The Spartans had trained to fight in zero gravity. It wasn’t easy. The slightest motion sent you spinningout of control. A flash overhead reflected off the hull. The Master Chief looked up. The Covenant ships were alive now—lances of blue laser fire flashed and motes of red light collected on their lateral lines. Their enginesglowed and they moved close to the station. A streak crossed the Master Chief’s field of vision in the blink of an eye. The center Covenant frigateshields strobed silver; the ship shattered into a cloud of glistening fragments. The orbital guns had turned and fired on the new threat. This was a suicide maneuver. How did the Covenant think they could withstand that kind of firepower? “Blue-One,” the Master Chief said. “Scan those ships with your scope.” Linda floated closer to the Master Chief. She pointed her sniper rifle up and sighted the ships. “We’vegot inbound targets,” she said, and fired. The Master Chief hit his magnification. A dozen pods burst from the two remaining Covenant ships. Trails of exhaust pointed right at the Spartans’ position. There were tiny specks accompanying the pods;the Master Chief increased his display’s magnification to maximum. They looked like men in thrusterpacks—No, they were definitely not men. These things had elongated heads—and even at this distance, the Master Chief could see past theirfaceplates and noted their pronounced sharklike teeth and jaws. They wore armor; it shimmered as theycollided with debris—which meant energy shields. These must be the elite warrior class Dr. Halsey had conjectured. The Covenant’s best? They were aboutto find out. Linda shot one of the EVA aliens. Shields shimmered around its body and the round bounced off. Shedidn’t stop. She pumped four more rounds into the creature—hitting a pinpoint target in its neck. Itsshields flickered and a round got through. Black blood gushed from the wound and the creature writhedin space. The other aliens spotted them. They jetted toward their location, firing plasma rifle and needlers. “Take cover,” the Master Chief said. He unclipped himself and clung to the side of the dropship. Linda followed—bolts of fire spattering on the hull next to them, spattering molten metal. Crystallineneedles bounced off their shields“Blue-Two,” the Master Chief said. “I said fall back.” James almost had the explosives rigged to the nose free. A shower of needles hit him. One stuck the tankof his thruster harness—penetrated. It remained embedded for a split second . . . then exploded. Exhaust billowed from the pack. The uncontrolled jets spun James in the microgravity. He slammed intothe station, bounced—then rocketed away into space, tumbling end over end, unable to control histrajectory. “Blue-Two! Come in,” the Master Chief barked over the COM channel. “Can—control—” James’ voice was punctuated with static. “They’ve—everywhere—” There was morestatic and the COM channel went dead. The Master Chief watched his teammate tumble away into the darkness. All his training, his superhumanstrength, reflexes, and determination . . . completely useless against the laws of physics. He didn’t even know if James was dead. For the moment, he had to assume that he was—put him out ofhis mind. He had a mission to complete.If he survived, then he’d get every UNSC ship in the area tomount a search and rescue op. Linda shrugged out of her thruster harness. The suppressing fire from the aliens halted. Covenant landing pods descended toward the station,touching down at roughly three-hundred-meter intervals. A pod landed twenty meters away. Its sides uncurled like the petals of a flower. Jackals in black-andbluevacuum suits drifted out. Their boots adhered to the station’s hull. “Let’s pave a path out of here, Blue-One.” “Roger that,” she said. Linda targeted spots their energy shields didn’t cover—boots, the top of one’s head, a fingertip. ThreeJackals went down in quick succession, their spacesuits ruptured by her marksmanship. The restscrambled for cover inside the pod. The Master Chief braced his back against the dropship and fired his assault rifle in controlled bursts. Themicrogravity played havoc with his aim. One Jackal leaped from his cover—straight towards them. The Master Chief switched to full auto and blasted his shield with enough rounds to send the alien flyingbackward off the station. He spent the clip, reloaded, and got out a grenade. He pulled the pin andlobbed it. He threw it in a flat trajectory. The grenade ricocheted off the far side of the pod and bounced inside. It detonated—a flash and spray of freeze-dried blue vented upward. The explosion had caught the enemyon their unshielded sides. “Blue-One, secure that landing pod. I’ll cover you.” He leveled his rifle. “Yes, sir.” Linda grabbed a pipe that ran along the station and pulled herself hand over hand. When shewas inside the pod, she flashed him a green light on his heads-up display. The Master Chief crawled toward the prow of the Pelican. As he crested the ship he saw that the stationwas swarming with Covenant troops: a hundred Jackals and at least six Elites. They pointed toward thePelican and slowly started to advance on their position. “Come and get it,” the Master Chief muttered. He pulled two grenades from his satchel and wedged them into the C-12 on the nose of the ship. Hepushed off and propelled himself back to his teammate. She grabbed him and pulled him into the interior of the open pod. Bits of a dozen dead Jackals pastedthe inside. “You’ve got a new target,” he told her. “A pair of frag grenades. Sight on them and wait for my order tofire.” She propped her rifle on the edge of the open pod and aimed. Jackals crawled over the Pelican—one of the Elite warriors appeared as well, maneuvering in a harness,flying over the ship. The Elite gestured imperiously, directing the Jackals to search the ship. “Fire,” the Master Chief said. Linda fired once. The grenades detonated; the chain reaction set off the twenty kilograms of C-12. A subsonic fist slammed into the Master Chief and threw him to the far side of the landing pod. Eventwenty meters away, the sides of the craft warped and the top edges sheared away. He looked over the edge. There was a crater where the Pelican had been. If anything had survived that blast, it was now in orbit. “We have a way in,” the Master Chief remarked. Linda nodded. In the distance, where the station curved out of view, more Covenant pods landed—and the MasterChief saw the silhouettes of hundreds of Jackals and Elite fighters crawling and jetting their way closer. “Let’s go, Blue-One.” They pulled themselves toward the hole. The detonation had blown through five decks, leaving a tunnelof ragged-edged metal and sputtering gas hoses. The Master Chief called up the station’s blueprints on his display. “That one,” he said, and pointed twodecks down. “B level. That’s where bay nine and theCircumference should be, three hundred meters toport.” They climbed into the interior and into B deck’s corridor. The station’s emergency lights were on, fillingthe passage with dull red illumination. The Master Chief paused and signaled her to halt. He pulled out the Lotus antitank mine from his satcheland set it on the deck. He set the sensitivity to maximum and triggered its proximity detectors. Anythingthat tried to follow them would get a surprise. The Master Chief and Linda gripped the handrails along the corridor and pulled themselves up thecurved hall. Flashes of automatic-weapons fire flashed in the low light, just ahead of their position. “Blue-One,” the Master Chief said, “Ahead, ten meters—there’s a pressure door open.” They quickly took positions on either side of the door. He sent his optical probe around the corner. The docking bay had a dozen ship berths on two levels. The Master Chief spotted a few batteredPelicans; a station service bot; and in berth eleven, a sleek private craft held in place by massive serviceclamps. Where the ship’s name should have been painted on the prow there was only a simple circle. That had to be the target. Two berths aft, four Marines in vac suits were pinned down by plasma and needler fire. The MasterChief turned his optical probe and saw what was pinning them down: thirty Jackals were in the forwardportion of the bay, slowly advancing, under cover of their energy shields. The Marines tossed frag grenades. The Jackals scrambled for cover and turned their shields. Three silent explosions flashed in the vacuum. Not one of the Jackals fell. Another explosion rippled through the deck—behind them. It shook the Master Chief’s bones in hisarmor. The Lotus mine had detonated. They didn’t have much time before the Covenant force outside caught up with them. The Master Chief readied his assault rifle. “Take those Jackals out, Blue-One. I’ll make a break for theCircumference .” Linda gripped the edge of the pressure door with her left hand, propped her rifle across it, and curled herright hand around the trigger. “There are a lot of them,” she said. “This may take a few seconds.” A flicker of a contact appeared on the Master Chief’s motion tracker—then vanished. He turned andbrought his assault rifle to bear. Nothing. “Hang on, Blue-One. I’m going to check our six.” Linda’s acknowledgment light winked on. The Master Chief eased back down the passage ten meters. No sensor contact. There was just dim redlight and shadows . . . but one of the shadows moved. It only took an instant for the image to fully resister: a black film peeled away from the darkness. It wasa meter taller than John and wore blue armor similar to that on Covenant warships. Its helmet waselongated and it had rows of sharp teeth; it looked like it was smiling at him. The Elite warrior leveled a plasma pistol. At this range, there was no way the creature would miss—the plasma weapon would cut through John’sslowly recharging shields almost immediately. And if John used his assault rifle, it wouldn’t cut thoughthe alien’s energy shield. In a simple exchange of fire, the alien would win. Unacceptable. He needed to change the odds. The Master Chief pushed off the wall and launched himself at the creature. He slammed into the Elitebefore it had a chance to fire. They tumbled backward and crashed into the bulkhead. The Master Chief saw the alien’s shield flickerand fade——he hammered on the edge of the alien’s gun. The creature howled soundlessly in the vacuum and dropped the plasma weapon. The Elite kicked him in the midsection; his shield took the brunt of the attack, but the blow sent himspinning end over end. He slapped his hand against the ceiling and stalled his spin—then dove under theElite’s follow-up attack. The Master Chief tried to grab the alien—but their weakened shields slid and crackled over one another. Too slippery. They bounced down the curved length of the passage. The Master Chief’s boot caught on a railing,twisted—a lance of pain shot up his leg—but he halted their combined momentum. The Elite pushed away and caught a railing on the opposite side of the passage. Then it turned andsprang back toward the Master Chief. John ignored the pain in his leg. He pushed himself at the alien. They collided—the Master Chief struck with both fists, but the force slid off the Elite’s shields. The Elite grabbed him and threw him. They both spun into the wall. The Master Chief was pinned—perfect: he had something to brace against in the zero gravity. He swunghis fist, used every muscle in his body, and connected with the alien’s midsection. Its shield shimmeredand crackled but some of the momentum transferred. The alien doubled over and reeled backward——and its hands found the plasma weapon that it had dropped. The Elite recovered quickly and aimed at the Master Chief. The Master Chief jumped, grabbed its wrist. He locked his armor’s glove articulation—it became a viseclamp. They wrestled for control. The gun pointed at the alien—then the Master Chief. The alien was as strong as the Master Chief. They spun and bounced off the floor, ceiling, and walls. They were too evenly matched. The Master Chief managed to force a stalemate: the pistol now pointed straight up between their bodies. If it went off it would hit them both—one shot at point-blank range might collapse their shields. They’dboth fry. The Master Chief whipped his forearm and elbow over the creature’s wrist and slammed it in the head. For a split second it was stunned and its strength ebbed. John turned the gun into its face—squeezed the firing mechanism. The plasma discharge exploded intothe creature. Fire sprayed across its shields; they shimmered, flickered, and dimmed. The energy splash washed over the Master Chief; his shields drained to a quarter. The internal suittemperature spiked to critical levels. But the Elite’s shields were dead. He didn’t wait for the plasma gun to recharge. The Master Chief grabbed the creature with his left hand—his right fist struck an uppercut to the head, a hook to the throat and chest, three rapid-fire strikes withhis forearm to its helmet—that cracked and hissed atmosphere. The Master Chief pushed away and fired the pistol again. The bolt of fire caught the Elite in the face. It writhed and clawed at nothing. The Elite shuddered . . . suspended in midair; it twitched and finallystopped moving. The Master Chief shot it again to make sure it was dead. Motion sensors picked up multiple targets approaching down the corridor—forty meters and closing. The Master Chief turned and double-timed it back to Blue-One. Linda was where he left her, shooting her targets with absolute concentration and precision. “There are more on the way,” he told her. “Reinforcements have already arrived in the bay,” she reported. “Twenty, at least. They’re learning,overlapping their shields—can’t get a good shot in.” Static crackled over the Master Chief’s COM channel:“Master Chief, this is Captain Keyes. Did you getthe NAV database?” The Captain sounded out of breath. “Negative, sir. We’re close.” “We’re bound in-system to retrieve you. ETA is five minutes. Destroy theCircumference’s database andget out ASAP. If you cannot accomplish your mission . . . I’ll have to take out the station with thePillar ofAutumn’s weapons. We are running out of time.” “Understood, sir.” The channel snapped off. Captain Keyes was wrong. They weren’t running out of time . . . time had already run out. Chapter 36 0616 Hours, August 30, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSCPillar of Autumn , Epsilon Eridani System near Reach Station GammaThe plan started to fall apart almost the instant thePillar of Autumn launched their Pelican dropships. “Bring us about to heading two seven zero,” Captain Keyes ordered Ensign Lovell. “Aye, Captain,” Lovell said. “Lieutenant Hall, track the dropships’ trajectories.” “Pelican One on target to dock with station Gamma,” Lieutenant Hall reported. “Pelican Two initiatingdescent burn. They are five by five to land just outside FLEET HQ—” “Captain,” Cortana interrupted. “Spatial disruption behind us.” The view screen snapped to the aft. Black space bubbled with green points of light; the stars in thedistance faded and stretched—a Covenant frigate appeared from nowhere. “Lieutenant Dominique,” Captain Keyes barked, “notify FLEETCOM that we have unwanted visitors inthe backyard. I respectfully suggest they reorient those orbital guns ASAP. Ensign Lovell, turn this shiparound and give me maximum power to the engines. Lieutenant Hikowa, prepare to fire the MAC gunand arm Archer missile pods B1 through B7.” The crew jumped to their tasks. ThePillar of Autumn spun about, her engines flared, and she slowly came to a halt. The ship started backtoward the new Covenant threat. “Sir,” Cortana said. “Spatial disruptions increasing exponentially.” Two more Covenant frigates appeared, flanking the first ship. As soon as they exited Slipstream space—a white-hot line streaked across the blackness. A Super MACgun had targeted them and fired. The Covenant ship only existed for a moment longer. Its shields flashedand the hull blasted into fragments. “They’re powered down,” Captain Keyes said. “No lights, no plasma weapons charging, no lasers. Whatare they doing?” “Perhaps,” Cortana said, “their pinpoint jumps require all their energy reserves.” “A weakness?” Captain Keyes mused. “Not for long,” Cortana replied. “Covenant energy levels climbing.” The two remaining Covenant ships powered up—lights snapped on, engines glowed, and motes of redlight appeared and streamed along their lateral lines. “Entering optimal firing range,” Lieutenant Hikowa announced. “Targeting solutions computer for bothships, Captain.” “Target the port vessel with our MAC gun,” Lieutenant Hikowa. “Ready Archer missiles for thestarboard target. Let’s hope we can draw their fire.” Lieutenant Hikowa typed in the commands. “Ready, sir.” “Fire.” ThePillar of Autumn ’s MAC gun fired three times. Thunder roiled up from the ventral decks. Archermissiles snaked through space toward the Covenant frigate on the starboard edge of the enemy formation. The Covenant ships fired . . . but not at thePillar of Autumn . Plasma bolts launched toward the twoclosest orbital guns. ThePillar of Autumn ’s MAC rounds struck the Covenant ship once, twice. Their shields flared, glowed,and dimmed. The third round struck clean and penetrated her hull aft—sent the ship spinningcounterclockwise. The orbital MAC guns fired again—a streak of silver and the port Covenant vessel shattered—a splitsecond later the starboard ship exploded, too. But their plasma torpedoes continued toward their targets, splashing across two of the orbital defenseplatforms. The guns melted and collapsed into boiling molten spheres in the microgravity. Thirteen guns left, Captain Keyes thought. Not exactly a lucky number. “Lieutenant Dominique,” he said, “request FLEETCOM to send all arriving vessels in-system to take updefense positions near our guns. The Covenant is willing to sacrifice a ship for one of our orbital guns. Advise them the Covenant ships appear to be dead in space for a few seconds after they execute apinpoint jump.” “Got it, sir,” Lieutenant Dominique said. “Message away.” “Lieutenant Hikowa,” Captain Keyes said. “Send the destruction codes to those wild missiles welaunched.” “Aye, sir.” “Belay that,” Captain Keyes said. Something didn’t feel right. “Lieutenant Hall, scan the region foranything unusual.” “Scanning, sir,” she said. “There are millions of hull fragments; radar is useless. Thermal is off the charts—everything is hot out there.” She paused, leaned closer, and a hank of her blond hair fell into her face,but she didn’t brush it aside. “Reading motiontoward Gamma station, sir. Landing pods.” “Lieutenant Hikowa,” Keyes said. “Repurpose those Archer missiles. New targets—link with LieutenantHall for coordinates.” “Yes, Captain,” they said in unison. “Diversion, distraction, and deceit,” Captain Keyes said. “The Covenant’s tactics are almost gettingpredictable.” A hundred pinpoints of fire dotted the distant space as their missiles found Covenant targets. “Picking up activity just out of the effective range of our orbital guns,” Cortana said. “Show me,” Captain Keyes said. The titanic Covenant vessel Keyes had seen before was back. It fired its brilliant blue-white beam—alance across space—that struck the destroyerHerodotus , one hundred thousand kilometers distant. Thebeam cut clean through the ship, stem to stern, bisecting her. “Christ,” Ensign Lovell whispered. A salvo of orbital gun rounds fired at this new target . . . but it was too far away. The ship moved out ofthe trajectory of the shells. They missed. Another beam flashed from the Covenant vessel. Another ship—a carrier, theMusashi —was severedamidships as it moved to cover the orbital guns. The aft section of the ship continued to thrust forward,her engines still running hot. “They’re going to sniper our ships,” Keyes said. “Leave us nothing to fortify Reach.” He took out hispipe and tapped it in the palm of his hand. “Ensign Lovell. Plot an intercept course. Engines tomaximum. We’re going to take that ship out.” “Sir?” Lovell sat straighter. “Yes, sir. Plotting course now.” Cortana appeared on the holographic display. “I assume you have another brilliant navigationalmaneuver to evade this enemy, Captain.” “I thought I’d fly straight in, Cortana . . . and let you do the driving.” “Straight? Youare joking.” Logic symbols streamed up her body. “I never joke when it comes to navigation,” Captain Keyes said. “You will monitor the energy state ofthat ship. The instant you detect a buildup in their reactors, a spike of particle emissions—anything—you fire our emergency thrusters to throw off their aim.” Cortana nodded. “I’ll do my best,” she said. “Their weapondoes travel at light speed. There won’t bemuch time to—” A bang resonated through their port side hull. Captain Keyes flew sideways. Blue-white light flashed ontheir port view screen. “One shot missed,” Cortana replied. Captain Keyes stood up and straightened his uniform. “Ready MAC gun, Lieutenant Hikowa. ArmArcher missile pods C1 through E7. Give me a firing solution for missile impact on our last MACround.” Lieutenant Hikowa arched an eyebrow. She had good reason to be dubious. They would be firing morethan five hundred missiles at a single target. “Solution online, sir. Guns hot and ready.” “Distance, Lieutenant Hall?” “Closing in on extreme range for MAC guns, sir. In four . . . three. . . .” An explosion to starboard and thePillar of Autumn jumped. Keyes was braced this time. “Fire, Lieutenant Hikowa. Send them back where they belong.” “Missiles away, sir. Waiting to coordinate MAC rounds.” Blue lightning washed out the view screen. Dull thumps sounded through thePillar of Autumn like astring of firecrackers going off. The ship listed to port, and it started to roll. “We’re hit!” Lieutenant Hall said. “Decompression on Decks C, D, and E. Sections two through twentyseven. Venting atmosphere. Reactor’s damaged, sir.” She listened to her headset. “Can’t get a clearreport of what’s going on belowdecks. We’re losing power.” “Seal those sections. Lieutenant Hikowa, do we have gun control?” “Affirmative.” “Then fire at will, Lieutenant.” ThePillar of Autumn shuddered as its MAC gun fired. Pings and groans diffused though her damagedhull. A trio of white-hot projectiles appeared on the view screen, chasing the Archer missiles towardtheir intended target. The first round struck the Covenant ship; its shields rippled. The second and third rounds struck, andmore than five hundred missiles detonated along her length. Flame dotted the massive vessel, and hershields blazed solid silver. They faded and popped. A dozen missiles impacted her hull and exploded,scarring the bluish armor. “Minimal damage to the target, sir,” Lieutenant Hall reported. “But we downed their shields,” Captain Keyes said. “We can hurt them. That’s all I needed to know. Lieutenant Hikowa, make ready to fire again. Identical targeting solution. Lieutenant Hall, launch ourremote-piloted Longsword interceptor and arm its Shiva nuclear warhead. Cortana, take control of thesingle ship.” Cortana tapped her foot. “Longsword away,” she said. “Where do you want me to park this thing?” “Intercept course for the Covenant ship,” he told her. “Sir,” Lieutenant Hikowa cried. “We have an insufficient charge rate to fire the MAC guns.” “Understood,” Captain Keyes said. “Divert all power from the engines to regenerate gun capacitors.” “May I point out—” Cortana said and crossed her arms “—that if you power down the engines, we willbe inside the blast radius of the Shiva warhead when it reaches the Covenant ship?” “Noted,” Captain Keyes said. “Do it.” “Capacitors at seventy-five percent,” Lieutenant Hikowa announced. “Eighty-five. Ninety-five. Fullcharge, sir. Ready to fire.” “Fire at will,” Captain Keyes ordered. “Missiles away—” A javelin of blue-white energy from the Covenant ship slashed at thePillar of Autumn . The beam struck,and cut through the hull. ThePillar of Autumn slid into a flat spin as the explosive decompressionknocked the ship off course. As theAutumn spun, the Covenant energy beam carved a spiral pattern inthe hull, shredding armor and puncturing deep into the ship. The ship lurched sickeningly as the beam played across the portside Archer pods; the missiles detonatedin their tubes. Keyes was nearly thrown from the command chair as the deck bucked beneath him. He tightened his safety straps and scowled at the tactical displays. “Damage report!” he yelled, his voicecompeting with the dozens of hazard alarms that blared through the bridge speakers. Cortana brought up a holographic view of the ship and flagged damaged areas in pulsing red. “Portlaunch and storage bays have been breached—fires on all decks, all sections. Primary fusion chamber isbreached.” ThePillar of Autumn tumbled out of control. “Cortana, get us straight and level. We have to fire our guns!” “Yes, Captain.” Her body became a blur of mathematical symbols. “This is an extremely chaotictrajectory,” she said. “Atmosphere still venting. Hang on. There. Got it.” ThePillar of Autumn righted herself. The Covenant ship centered on the main view screen. This closeCaptain Keyes saw how huge the ship was—three times the mass of a normal cruiser. There was a podmounted on the top deck; it swiveled and tracked thePillar of Autumn , bringing the turret to bear. Itglowed electric white as it built up another lethal charge. “Fire when ready, Lieutenant Hikowa,” Captain Keyes ordered. “Firing!” Thunder rumbled belowdecks. “MAC rounds away.” The shells struck the Covenant vessel; Archer missiles impacted . . . only a handful got though herdowned shields. “Cortana, crash-land our Longsword on that bastard. Set timer delay on the nuke for fifteen seconds.” “Afterburners on,” Cortana replied. “Impact in three . . . two . . . one. She’s down, sir.” ThePillar of Autumn sped past the Covenant ship. “Lieutenant Hall, divert any power you can muster to the engines.” “Bringing secondary reactor back online, sir. That gives us fifteen percent.” “Aft camera on center screen,” Captain Keyes ordered. The Covenant ship slowly turned toward thePillar of Autumn and its turret tracked their position. For thefirst time in his life, Keyes prayed that a Covenant ship’s shields would hold. The alien ship became a flash of white light; its outline blurred. Their shields held for a split second asthe Shiva warhead detonatedinside its protective aura. The shockwave rebounded off the asymmetricalshape of the shields just before their collapse. Jets of energy exploded outward at three different angles. Thunder and plasma roiled into space . . . cleanly missing thePillar of Autumn . The light faded and the Covenant flagship was gone. Captain Keyes puffed again on his pipe and tapped it out. Maybe now they had a chance to rally whatremained of the UNSC fleet and defend Reach. “Congratulations Captain,” Cortana said. “I couldn’t have done better myself.” “Thank you, Cortana. Is there a planet nearby?” “Beta Gabriel,” she said. “Fourteen million kilometers. Practically next door.” “Good. Ensign Lovell, plot a course for a slingshot orbit. Reverse our trajectory back in-system.” “Sir,” Lieutenant Dominique interrupted. “Incoming transmission from Reach. It’s the Spartans.” “On speakers, Lieutenant.” Static hissed from the channel. A man’s voice broke through.“—bad. Reactor complex seven has beencompromised. We’re falling back. Might be able to save number three. Set off those charges now!” There was a series of explosions . . . more white noise, then the man returned.“Be advised Pillar ofAutumn, groundside reactors are being taken. Orbital guns at risk. Nothing we can do. Too many. Wewill have to use the nukes—”Static washed away the transmission. “Captain,” Cortana said. “You need to see this, sir.” She overlaid a tactical map of the system on the main view screen. Tiny triangular red markers winkedon the edges: Covenant ships—dozens of them—reentered the system from Slipspace. “Sir,” she said, “when the guns around Reach go down. . . .” “There will be nothing left to stop the Covenant,” he finished. Captain Keyes turned to Lieutenant Dominique. “Get those Spartans back online,” he said. “Tell them toevac ASAP. In a few minutes, it’s going to get very nasty around Reach.” He took a deep breath. “Then raise the Master Chief on a secure channel. Let’s hope he has some goodnews for us.” Chapter 37 0637 Hours, August 30, 2552 (Military Calendar) /Epsilon Eridani System, Reach Station Gamma“Multiple signals on motion tracker,” the Master Chief said. “They’re all around us.” The passageway behind the Master Chief and Blue-One swarmed with blips. So did docking Bay Nine,ahead of them. The Master Chief saw, however, not all the blips were hostiles. Four Marine friend-orfoetags strobed on his heads-up display: SGT. JOHNSON, PVT. O’BRIEN, PVT. BISENTI, and PVT. JENKINS. The Master Chief opened up a COM channel to them. “Listen up, Marines. Your lines of fire are sloppy;tighten them up. Concentrate on one Jackal at a time—or you’ll just waste your ammo on their shields.” “Master Chief?” Sergeant Johnson said, startled. “Sir, yes sir!” “Blue-One,” the Master Chief said. “I’m going in. We’re going to open up theCircumference like a tincan.” He nodded toward the Pelican in the adjacent bay. “Give me a few grenades over the top.” “Understood,” she replied. “You’re covered, sir.” She primed two frag grenades, swung around thepressure doors, and threw them behind the Jackals. The Master Chief pushed off the wall—propelled himself in the zero gee across the bay. The grenades detonated and caught the Jackals on their backsides. Blue blood spattered on the insides oftheir shields and across the deck. The Master Chief crashed into the Pelican’s hull. He pulled himself to the side hatch, opened it, andcrawled in. He got into the cockpit, released the docking clamps, and tapped the maneuvering thrustersonce to break free. The Pelican lifted off the deck. The Master Chief said over the COM channel, “Marines and Blue-One: take cover behind me.” Hemaneuvered the Pelican into the center of the docking bay. A dozen Jackals poured in through the passage that Blue-One had just left. The Master Chief fired with the Pelican’s autocannon—cut down their shields and peppered the alienswith hundreds of rounds. They exploded into chunks; alien blood twisted crazily in zero gravity. “Master Chief,” Linda said, “I’m picking upthousands of signals on the motion tracker, inbound from alldirections. The entire station is crawling.” The Master Chief opened the Pelican’s back hatch. “Get in,” he said. Blue-One and the Marines piledinside. The Marines did a double take at Blue-One and the Master Chief in their MJOLNIR armor. The Master Chief turned the Pelican to face theCircumference . He sighted the autocannon on the ship’sforward viewports—and opened fire. Thousands of rounds streamed from the chain-gun and crackedthrough the thick, transparent windows. He followed up with an Anvil-II missile. It blasted through theprow and peeled the craft open. “Take the controls,” he told Blue-One. He slipped out the side hatch and jumped to theCircumference . The inside of the ship’s cockpit wasscrap metal. He accessed the computer panel in the floor deck and located the NAV database core. Itwas a cube of memory crystal the size of his thumb. Such a tiny thing to cause so much trouble. He shot it three times with his assault rifle. It shattered. “Mission completed,” he said. One small victory in all this mess. The Covenant wouldn’t find Earth . . . today. He exited theCircumference . Jackals appeared on the level above them in the docking bay. His motiontracker blinked with solid contacts. He jumped back into the Pelican, strapped himself in the pilot’s chair, and turned the ship to face theouter doors. “Blue-One, signal the dockmaster AI to open the outer bay doors.” “Signal sent,” she said. “No response, sir.” She looked around. “There’s a manual release by the outerdoor.” She moved toward the aft hatch. “I’ll get this one, sir. It’s my turn. Cover me.” “Roger, Blue-One. Keep your head down. I’ll draw their fire.” She launched herself out the back hatch. The Master Chief tapped the Pelican’s thrusters and the ship rose higher in the bay—up to the secondlevel. The upper decks were the mechanic bays; the area was littered with ships that were partiallydisassembled in various stages of repair. It was also where a hundred Jackals and a handful of Elitewarriors were waiting for him. They opened fire. Plasma bolts scored the hull of the Pelican. The Master Chief fired the chain-gun and let loose a salvo of missiles. Alien shields blazed and failed. Blue and green blood splashed and flash-froze in the icy vacuum. He hit the top thrusters and dropped down to the lower level—slammed the ship back into a berth forcover. Blue-One crouched by the manual release. The outer doors eased open, revealing the night and starsbeyond. “You’re clear for exit, Master Chief. We’re home free—” A new contact on the Pelican’s targeting display appeared—right behind Linda. He had towarn her—A bolt of plasma struck her in the back. Another blot of fire blazed her from the upper decks andsplashed across her front. She crumpled—her shields flickered and went out. Two more bolts hit herchest. A third blast smashed into her helmet. “No!” the Master Chief said. He felt each of those plasma bolts as if they had hit him, too. He moved the Pelican to cover her. Plasma struck the hull, melting its outer skin. “Get her inside!” he ordered the Marines. They jumped out, grabbed Linda and her smoldering armor, and pulled her inside the Pelican. The Master Chief sealed the hatch, ignited the engines and pushed them to full thrust—rocketing intospace. “Can you fly this ship?” he asked the Marine Sergeant. “Yes, sir,” Johnson replied. “Take over.” The Master Chief went to Linda and knelt by her side. Sections of her armor had melted and adhered toher. Underneath, in patches, bits of carbonized bone showed. He accessed her vital signs on his heads-updisplay. They were dangerously low. “Did you do it?” she whispered. “Get the database?” “Yes. We got it.” “Good,” she said. “We won.” She clasped his hand and closed her eyes. Her vital signs flat-lined. John squeezed her hand and let go. “Yes,” he said bitterly. “We won.” “Master Chief, come in.”Captain Keyes voice sounded over the COM channel. “ThePillar ofAutumnwill be in rendezvous position in one minute.” “We’re ready, Captain,” he answered. He set Linda’s hand over her chest. “I’mready.” The instant the Master Chief docked the Pelican to thePillar of Autumn , he felt the cruiser accelerate. He took Linda’s body double time to a cryo chamber and immediately froze her. She was clinically dead—there was no doubt of that. Still, if they could get her to a Fleet hospital, they might be able toresuscitate her. It was a long shot—but she was a Spartan. The med techs wanted to check him out as well, but he declined and took the elevator to the bridge toreport to Captain Keyes. As he rode inside the lift he felt the ship accelerate port—then starboard. Evasive maneuvers. The elevator doors parted and the Master Chief stepped onto the bridge. He snapped a crisp salute to Captain Keyes. “Reporting for debriefing, sir.” Captain Keyes turned and looked surprised to see him . . . or maybe he was shocked to see the conditionof his armor. It was charred, battered, and covered with alien blood. The Captain returned the Master Chief’s salute. “The NAV database was destroyed?” he asked. “Sir, I would not have left if my mission was incomplete.” “Of course, Master Chief. Very good,” Captain Keyes replied. “Sir, may I ask that you scan for active FOF tags in the region?” The Master Chief glanced at the mainview screen—saw scattered fights between Covenant and UNSC warships in the distance. “I lost a manon the station. He may be floating out there . . . somewhere.” “Lieutenant Hall?” the Captain asked. “Scanning,” she said. After a moment she looked back and shook her head. “I see,” the Master Chief replied. There could be worse deaths . . . but not for one of his Spartans. Floating helpless. Slowly suffocating and freezing—losing to an enemy that could not be fought. “Sir,” the Master Chief said, “when will thePillar of Autumn rendezvous with my planetside team?” Captain Keyes turned from the Master Chief and stared out into space. “We won’t be picking them up,” he said quietly. “They were overrun by Covenant forces. They never made orbit. We’ve lost contact withthem.” The Master Chief took a step closer. “Then I would like permission to take a dropship and retrieve them,sir.” “Request denied, Master Chief. We still have a mission to perform. And we cannot remain in this systemmuch longer. Lieutenant Dominique, aft camera on the main screen.” Covenant vessels swarmed though the Reach System in five-ship crescent formations. The remainingUNSC ships fled before them . . . those that could still move. Those ships too damaged to outrun theCovenant were blasted with plasma and laser fire. The Covenant had won this battle. They were mopping up before they glassed the planet; the MasterChief had seen this happen in a dozen campaigns. This time was different, however. This time the Covenant was glassing a planet . . . with his people still on it. He tried to think of a way to stop them . . . to save his teammates. He couldn’t. The Captain turned and strode to the Master Chief, stood by his side. “Dr. Halsey’s mission,” he said, “ismore important than ever now. It may be the only chance left for Earth. We have to focus on that goal.” Three dozen Covenant craft moved toward Gamma station and the now inert orbital defense platforms. They bombarded the installations—the mightiest weapons in the UNSC arsenal—with plasma. The gunsmelted, and boiled away. The Master Chief clenched his hands into fists. The Captain was correct: there was nothing to do nowexcept complete the mission they had set out to do. Captain Keyes barked, “Ensign Lovell, give me our best acceleration. I want to enter Slipstream space assoon as possible.” Cortana said, “Excuse me, Captain. Six covenant frigates are inbound on an intercept course.” “Continue evasive maneuvers, Cortana. Prepare the Slipspace generators and get me an appropriaterandomized exit vector.” “Aye, sir.” Navigation symbols flashed along the length of her holographic body. The Master Chief continued to watch as the Covenant ships closed in on them. Was he the only Spartan left? Better to die than live without his teammates. But he still had a mission: victory against the Covenant—and vengeance for his fallen comrades. “Generating randomized exit vector per the Cole Protocol,” Cortana said. The Master Chief glanced at her translucent body. She looked vaguely like a younger Dr. Halsey. Tinydots, ones, and zeros slid over her torso, arms, and legs. Her thoughts were literally worn on her sleeve;the symbols also appeared on Ensign Lovell’s NAV station. He cocked his head as the symbols and numbers scrolled across the NAV console. The representations of Slipspace vectors and velocity curves twisted across the screen—tantalizinglyfamiliar. He’d seen them somewhere before—but he could not make the connection. “Something on your mind, Master Chief?” Cortana asked. “Those symbols . . . I thought I had seen them somewhere before. It’s nothing.” Cortana got a far off look in her eyes. The marks cycling on her hologram shifted and rearranged. The Master Chief saw the Covenant fleet gathered around planet Reach. They swarmed and circled likesharks. The first of their plasma bombardments launched toward the surface. Clouds in the fire’s pathboiled away. “Jump to Slipspace, Ensign Lovell,” the Captain said. “Get us the hell out of here.” John remembered Chief Mendez’s words—that they had to live and fight another day. He was alive . . . and there was still plenty of fight left in him. And he would win this war—no matter what it took. SECTION VIHALOEPILOGUE0647 Hours, August 30, 2552 (Military Calendar) /UNSCPillar of Autumn , Epsilon Eridani System’s edgeCortana fired thePillar of Autumn ’s autocannons—targeting a dozen Seraph fighters harassing them asthey were accelerated out of the system. Seven Covenant frigates were now locked into the pursuit. Shedodged a volley of pulse laser fire, using the ventral emergency thrusters. She pushed the damaged secondary reactor to critical levels. They had to build up more speed beforeactivating the Shaw-Fujikawa Translight generators or the jump to Slipstream space would fail. She rechecked her calculations. Under the Cole Protocol, they would be jumping away from Earth . . . but it would not be a totally random heading. The Master Chief had been right when he said that he recognized the shorthand navigation symbols onthe NAV display. Cortana accessed the Spartans’ mission logs. She sifted through the data, and filed it into a secondarylong-term storage buffer. When she reviewed the database of his mission reports, Cortana learned thatSpartan 117had seen something similar on the Covenant vessel he had boarded in 2525. And again—thesymbols almost looked like those on the rock he had extracted from Covenant forces on Sigma OctanusIV. ONI reports on the symbols found in the anomalous rock had defied cryptoanalysis. Keyes’ order to plot a navigation route sparked a connection between this data; she accessed the aliensymbols, and rather than compare them with alphabets or hieroglyphics, compared them to starformations. There were some startling similarities—along with a number of differences. Cortana reanalyzed thesymbols and accounted for thousands of years of stellar drift. A tenth of a second later she had a close match on her charts—86.2 percent. Interesting. Perhaps the markings in the rock recovered on Sigma Octanus IV were navigation symbols,albeit highly unusual and stylized ones—mathematical symbols as artistic and elegant as Chinesecalligraphy. What was there that the Covenant wanted so badly that they had launched a full offensive against SigmaOctanus IV? Whatever it was . . . Cortana was interested, too. She compared the new NAV coordinates with her directives and was pleased with what she saw; thenew course complied with the Cole Protocol. Good. The Covenant frigates fired their plasma again. Seven bolts of fire streaked toward thePillar of Autumn . She dumped the coordinates to the NAV controls and stored the logic path that led to her deduction inher high-security buffer. “Approaching saturation velocity,” she told Captain Keyes. “Powering Shaw-Fujikawa Translightgenerators. New course available.” The Covenant frigates aligned with their outbound vector. They were going to try to follow thePillar ofAutumn through Slipspace. Damn. The Shaw-Fujikawa Translight generators tore a hole in normal space. Light boiled around thePillar ofAutumn and she vanished. Cortana had plenty of time to think on the journey. Most of the crew were frozen in cryo for the trip. Some of the engineers had elected to try to repair the main reactor. A futile gesture . . . but she lent thema few cycles to try to rebuild the convection inductor. Had Dr. Halsey been on Reach when it fell to the Covenant? Cortana felt a pang of regret for her creator. Maybe she had gotten away. The probability was low . . . but the doctor was a survivor. Cortana ran a self-diagnostic. Her Alpha-level commands were intact. She had not jeopardized herprimary mission by following this vector. There were, unfortunately, sure to be Covenant ships whenthey arrived . . . wherever they arrived. The Covenant had followed them into Slipstream space. And they had always been faster and moreaccurate than UNSC navigators in the elusive dimension. Captain Keyes and the Master Chief would get their chance to disable and capture one of those vessels. Their “luck” had so far defied all probability and statistical variations. She hoped their defiance of theodds continued. “Captain Keyes? Wake up, sir,” Cortana said. “We will enter normal space in three hours.” Captain Keyes sat up in the cryo tube. He licked his lips and gagged. “I hate that stuff.” “The inhalant surfactant is highly nutritious, sir. Please regurgitate and swallow the protein complex.” Captain Keyes swung his legs out of the tube. He coughed and spat the mucus onto the deck. “Youwouldn’t say that, Cortana, if you ever tasted this stuff. Ship status?” “Reactor two has been fully repaired,” she replied. “Reactors one and three are inoperable. That gives ustwenty percent power. Archer missile pods I and J rows serviceable. Autocannon ammunition at tenpercent. Our two remaining Shiva warheads are intact.” She paused and double-checked the MAC gun. “Magnetic Accelerator Gun’s capacitors depolarized. We cannot fire the system, sir.” “More good news,” he grumbled. “Continue.” “Hull breaches patched—but the majority of decks eleven, twelve, and thirteen are destroyed—thatincludes the Spartans’ weapons locker.” “Are there any infantry weapons left?” Keyes asked. “We may need to repel boarders.” “Yes, Captain. A substantial number of standard Marine infantry weapons survived the engagement. Would you like an inventory?” “Later. What about the crew?” “All crew accounted for. Spartan 117 is in cryo sleep with the Marine and security personnel. Wakingbridge officers and all essential personnel.” “And the Covenant?” “We’ll know in a moment if they were able to track us, sir.” “Very well. I’ll be on the bridge in ten minutes.” He eased out of the tube. “I’m getting too damn old tobe frozen and shot through space at light speed,” he muttered. Cortana checked the status of the waking crew. There was a minor flutter in Lieutenant Dominique’sheart, which she corrected. Otherwise, status normal. The Captain and crew assembled on the bridge. They waited. “Five minutes until normal space, sir,” Cortana announced. She knew they could see the countdown timer, but Cortana noticed that the crew responded well to hercalm voice in stressful situations. Their reaction times generally improved by as much as 15 percent—give or take. Sometimes, human imperfection made calculations maddeningly imprecise. She ran another check on all intact systems. ThePillar of Autumn had taken a tremendous beating atReach. It was a wonder it was still in one piece. “Entering normal space in thirty seconds,” she informed Captain Keyes. “Shut down all systems, Cortana. I want us to be dark when we hit normal space. If the Covenant didfollow us—maybe we can hide.” “Aye, sir. Running dark.” The view screen filed with green light; smears of stars came into focus. A purple-hued gas giant filled athird of the screen. Captain Keyes said, “Fire thrusters to position us in orbit around the planet, Ensign Lovell.” “Aye, sir,” he replied. ThePillar of Autumn glided around the gravity well of the moon. Cortana detected a radar echo ahead, an object hidden in the shadow. As the ship rounded the dark side of the gas giant, the object came into full view. It was a ring-shapedstructure . . . gigantic. “Cortana,” Captain Keyes whispered. “What is that?” Cortana noted a sudden spike in pulse and respiration among the bridge crew . . . particularly the Captain. The object spun serenely in the heavens. The outer surface was gray metal, reflecting the brilliantstarlight. From this distance, the surface of the object seemed to be engraved with deep, ornategeometric patterns. “Could this be some kind of naturally occurring phenomenon?” Dominique asked. “Unknown,” Cortana replied. She activated the ship’s long-range detection gear. Cortana’s holo image frowned. ThePillar of Autumn’s scanning systems were fine for combat . . . but for this kind of analysis it was like using stone tools. She diverted processing power away from ancillary systems and channeled it into the task. Figures scrolled across the sensor displays. “The ring is ten thousand kilometers in diameter,” Cortana announced, “and twenty-two point threekilometers thick. Spectroscopic analysis is inconclusive, but patterns do not match any known Covenantmaterials, sir.” She paused and aimed the long-range camera array at the ring. A moment later a close-up of the objectsnapped into focus. Keyes let out a low whistle. The inner surface was a mosaic of greens, blues, and browns—trackless desert; jungles; glaciers and vastoceans. Streaks of white clouds cast deep shadows upon the terrain. The ring rotated and brought a newfeature into view—a tremendous hurricane forming over an unimaginably wide body of water. Equations scrolled furiously across Cortana as she studied the ring. She checked and rechecked hernumbers—the rotational speed of the object and its estimated mass. They didn’t quite add up. She ranthrough a series of passive and active scans . . . and found something. “Captain,” Cortana said, “the object is clearly artificial. There’s a gravity field that controls the ring’sspin and keeps the atmosphere inside. At this range—and with this gear—I can’t say with one hundredpercent certainty, but it appears that the ring has an oxygen-nitrogen atmosphere and Earth-normalgravity.” “If it’s artificial, who the hell built it . . . and what in God’s name is it?” Cortana processed that question for a full three seconds, then finally answered: “I don’t know, sir.” Captain Keyes took out his pipe, lit it, and puffed once. He examined the curls of smoke thoughtfully. “Then we’d better find out.” They stand alone—undaunted—before the mightiest enemy in the universe. But these are no ordinary men. They are SPARTANS . . . PLUMB THE THRILLING DEPTHS OF HALO—AS SECRETS UNFOLD AND THE ACTIONBEGINS . . . HALOThe Fall of Reach The End