Read Halo: Ghosts of Onyx Online
Authors: Eric S. Nylund
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Military science fiction
bodies of Jackals and Grunts.
He clung to the handle; one side of the metal bar bent and pulled free, but then the tremendous gale subsided. All the air had evacuated into space.
Fred rechecked his atmospheric reserves. They had been in combat and on the COE for a long time where no one was taking tiny breaths. His MJOLNIR suit had seven minutes of air left.
He went back to the datapad and checked: all corridors and rooms read zero pressure.
Unless there were Covenant forces in pressure suits, this ship was a ghost ship now.
Will and Linda joined him.
Fred routed power and the doors slid apart.
Blue Team entered the hallway and quickly made their way toward the bridge. Six dead Brutes lay on the floor. For all their ferocity, even they had to breathe.
Fred halted at another set of pressure doors and accessed the control panels. Linda knelt by his side, sniper rifle butted to her shoulder, aimed at the center of the doors. Will stood on the opposite side, a grenade in each hand, ready to throw.
Fred touched his helmet to the bulkhead, and listened, boosting his aural sensors. Nothing.
He then keyed the doors open.
The oval bridge was empty save for a single Covenant Hunter who miraculously clung to the railing of the command console. Inside the monster's eight-centimeter-thick armor, its body, composed of a colony of eel creatures, had oozed out and freeze dried onto the deck.
The three Spartans checked the life-pod hatches for any sign
of the enemy. Fred saw the open space beyond, stars… and the other Covenant destroyer turning toward them.
He moved onto the command platform and set the datapad in the interface location. Fred had to hurry; he had to move slow, too. Rushing now might cause errors that could cost them more time. It took all he had to focus on language matrices, numbers, and icons.
Will watched from a life-pod hatch, and whispered over TEAMCOM, "Destroyer on intercept vector."
Fred accessed the datapad's memory and got the Slipspace jump solution provided by a NAV Officer on Cairo Station. He hoped the Covenant ship would accept the human mathematics or they'd be stuck here.
Linda joined Will by the open hatch, peering through her Oracle sniper scope. "Ten thousand kilometers and closing fast," she said.
"Arm FENRIS warheads," Fred told her.
"Roger," she said.
This was where the luck part of their plan would be stretched to its thinnest. Had the Covenant shuttled the now-active warheads onto their ships? Would they notice the detonators had been primed?
"Confirmation signal lock," Linda said.
"Okay, come on," Fred whispered to the datapad.
The command surfaces lit and holographic geometries drifted over its surface. A tiny version of the console appeared on his datapad with English translations.
Fred grabbed the spherical Slipspace command and rotated it. Its ready status winked ultramarine. He input the jump coordinates.
The sphere then froze, and a white vector stretched toward tiny stars that appeared over the command surface. A blinking gold starburst appeared to initiate the Slipspace transition.
"Two-second countdown," he told Linda, "on my mark."
Will pulled the hydraulics from the open hatch, grasped the door, and rolled it back into place.
The bridge's main holographic viewer flickered on and showed the closing destroyer. Warning indicators pointed to the ships' heating lateral plasma lines.
"Two-second timer confirmed," Linda said. "Commands accepted and confirmed. All six FENRIS nukes show armed status."
"Mark!" Fred tapped the jump button.
Nothing happened…
Black space turned white.
Lord Hood watched from the command deck of Cairo Station, ignoring the warbling emergency signals.
The Covenant destroyer had maneuvered to optimal plasma range. He hoped the shields of the Spartan-captured ship staved off at least one salvo, and gave Blue Team the time they needed.
Spartan-104's plan had been inspired, yet in Lord Hood's seasoned opinion, suicidal. Dr. Catherine Halsey had once told him in confidence that Spartans considered it their duty to prove the impossible possible.
The Covenant ship's plasma lines reddened, bolts formed, and launched. At the same time, the enemy destroyer flashed
inside
their energy shields; its hull glowed and vaporized as the stolen nuclear devices onboard detonated. A circle of white light appeared an instant before Cairo Station's polarization shields cut the viewscreens. Thermal and radiologicals showed smears of amber and red mushrooming outward in a wavering torus.
Station Wayward Rest had been obliterated as well. The length of the
Tallo Negro del Maiz
crumpled and fell to the Earth.
There was no sign of the Spartan-held ship. There was no way to know if they had succeeded and jumped into Slipstream space or not.
Lord Hood chose to believe they had done the impossible anti whispered, "Godspeed, Blue Team."
CHAPTER
TWENTY-FIVE
1440 HOURS, NOVEMBER 3, 2552 (MILITARY CALENDAR) \ ABOARD THE CAPTURED COVENANT DESTROYER
BLOODIED SPIRIT,
IN SLIPSTREAM SPACE
Fred sat on the bridge deck of
Bloodied Spirit,
breathing air tinged with the scent of Hunter blood. It smeiled like burnt plastic to him.
He polished a tiny quantum mirror and set it back into its sensor housing. This he slipped into the pauldron of his MJOLNIR armor and clicked the cover. The mirror had been encrusted with sea salt, causing his motion sensor to fail… and almost costing him his life back on Havana.
Linda passed a canteen to Fred and sloshed its contents to get his attention. He accepted it, opened his faceplate, and enjoyed a taste of nonrecycled water.
Were the three of them on this ship the last Spartans? Fred wondered if John was dead. Or Kelly. There was no mention of Kelly in Dr. Halsey's communique. And what had ever happened to Gray Team on a mission far outside the confines of UNSC space, now missing for over a year? He would never voice these worries. It might sap Blue Team's morale. But for the first time, real doubt eroded Fred's confidence. Doubt that John, Kelly, and the others were alive.
Linda touched his arm with a finger and dispersed these thoughts. She then patted the bullet-shaped nuclear warhead on the floor next to him. "Remember? The rebel base?"
They'd brought one of the FENRIS warheads up here in case
they needed a final option. Fred didn't think they would need it… but it was best to cover all contingencies.
"What insurgent base?" Will asked, rolling over and waking up.
"It was twenty years ago," Fred explained. "Rebels in the Tauri System claimed they had nukes to trade. Blue Team was sent in to recover the warheads, but it turned out to be a trap." He shook his head. "Would have worked too, if it hadn't been for Kurt."
Linda took the canteen and hoisted it. "To absent friends," she whispered and sipped.
She passed the canteen to Will, who drank deeply.
A red octahedral flashed over the Covenant command console. It projected amber beams onto the surface and the holographic geometries shifted.
The Spartans dropped their faceplates.
Fred moved to the console, overrode the controls, but they reverted, seeming to have a mind of their own.
Were there Covenant still alive on this ship, attempting to regain control?
Translations scrolled across his datapad:
"BLOODIED SPIRIT
AUTOMATED…SYSTEM ACTIVATED…TO BATTLE SOUNDED…HEED THE CALL TO WAR…WARNING…SLIPSPACE ANOMALY…DIMENSION YED-4 DETECTED…CAUSE: SINGULARITY AFTERMATH."
"Trouble," he told Linda and Will.
Linda bounded to the weapons station and her hands moved over the surface. "Making plasma lines hot," she said. "I think. Laser capacitors charging."
Will stood at the NAV station. "We're approximately sixteen light-years from Onyx," he said. "No stellar systems or other significant bodies in the region. The Slipspace matrix is decon-voluting."
Fred tapped a hexagon—the Slipstream space matrix reinitialization command. It blinked
once and faded.
"We're entering normal space," he said. "Stand ready."
Stars winked on in the bridge's holographic viewer along with four Covenant ships.
Three smaller ships gave chase to one larger. The small ones were two-thirds the
tonnage of
Bloodied Spirit.
The larger ship was twice their size. The vessels' sleek outlines made Fred think of sharks hunting a whale.
Lances of plasma flashed from the three and shimmered as they impacted on the larger ship's shields.
"I think we dropped out of Slipspace because of some anomaly," Fred said. "Or… in response to a distress signal. I'm not sure which."
"From what ship?" Linda asked. "Which one do we target first?"
The central holographic viewer faded and a Brute materialized standing before them with blue-gray skin, a gorilla head, and red feral eyes. He spoke in a series of grunts and hisses.
A translation popped on Fred's datapad:
"Brothers, the schism is here. We are free at last to crush the lesser races. We will no longer be led by
—"
The Brute looked about the bridge, blinked, and then glared at Fred. It hissed and vanished.
On the translation pad a single word had appeared: "Demons."
One of the smaller ships turned toward them. Ultramarine spheres flashed over Linda's weapon console.
"It's targeting us," she said.
"That answers that," Fred muttered. "Target the smaller ships. Will, get me a best-guess Slipspace transition vector to Onyx."
Fred had no intention of engaging in ship-to-ship combat. He was no captain. He'd be out of his depth if this were a UNSC ship with controls he could understand, and astrogation, tactics, and weapon systems he was familiar with. On
Bloodied Spirit,
he couldn't begin to fathom how to fight. Running was the only realistic option.
"Working on a solution," Will said. He glanced back and forth between the printed crib sheet of translated symbols and the Covenant mathematics that flashed before him.
"Time on target calculated," Linda announced. "Ready to fire plasma."
"Just buy us time," Fred told her. "We're not moving to engage."
"Covenant frigate now in weapons range," Linda said. "Plasma lines heating. They've fired!"
On the central viewer twin crimson lances streaked from the ship and arced toward them. Circles snapped on the tips of these lines, which then twisted into three-dimensional spheres.
The holographic perspective pulled back and showed the frigate, the plasma, and their ship in their relative positions. The translucent spheres centered on the plasma shots and overlapped
Bloodied Spirit.
"I think those spheres are steering solutions," Linda said. "They indicate how far they can direct the plasma blots. They have us."
"Back us off," Fred told Will.
"Okay…" Will searched the controls. He grabbed an orange arrow and twisted it aft. "Answering full reverse," he said.
"It won't be enough," Linda said.
Linda placed both hands on her controls, and a new pair of spheres appeared in the field of stars. "That's our firing solution," she whispered, and her voice cooled to that detached liquid-nitrogen temperature that Fred had come to identify with her Zen no-mind state.
Fred consulted his console. "Thirteen seconds until plasma impact," he said, and his hands gripped the edges of his console.
"Slipspace vector calculated," Will said, "Capacitors charging… in twenty-three seconds."
Linda made tiny adjustments over her controls, and flicked her fingers forward. "Plasma away," she said.
The bridge lights dimmed. The main hologram showed
Bloodied Spirit
as its lateral lines flared and plasma detached and accelerated away, but not toward the enemy frigate, rather toward the rapidly approaching plasma bolts.
Steering spheres appeared on Linda's plasma lines. Her hands twisted and turned.
The plasma oscillated back and forth in response.
The enemy lines started to move as well.
Fred understood what she was trying to do: fight fire with fire. But at these velocities hitting one plasma beam with another was like shooting a bullet out of the air.
Linda's trancelike motions slowed.
The plasma bolts raced toward one another. The enemy's plasma veered out of the way
Linda brought her hands together in a blur—both of
Bloodied Spirit's
bolts spiraled about the enemy's line of fire, tighter and faster, and connected.
Three lines smeared into a blob and jets erupted across the dark of space, fading to a haze of red.
"Got it," Linda whispered.
"The other bolt still tracking," Will said. "Impact in two seconds."
"Shields?" Fred asked.
"Working," Will said. "No—they're down."
The holographic viewers spilled blazing red light onto the bridge.