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Mindspace - Complete Series

Page 52

by A. K. DuBoff


  Kyle nodded. “Sounds good—”

  “Shite!” Ari shouted.

  Kira’s jaw dropped. The tunnel walls that had seemed solid only second before were now a swirling mass of particulates.

  “Run!”

  CHAPTER 11

  Kira raced forward through the flurry of sand-like particles. “What the fok is this?!”

  “I’ll make sure our exit is clear. Get Kira!” Kyle surged ahead.

  Ari and Nia tried to get back to her three meters behind them in the tunnel, but the particles bound together to form a lattice barrier in their path.

  Ari struck it with his arm. The latticework flexed to accommodate the blow. “Sneaky bastards waited until the rest of us were at the exit,” he spat.

  The particles glommed onto Kira’s powered armor and attempted to stick her boots to the floor. She trudged forward, but each step was more labored than the last as the particles congealed around her. After four steps, she may as well have been walking through hip-deep cement.

  “It’s got me!” she shouted.

  “I already hate these things.” Nia readied her multi-handgun on the sonic setting. “Mute your suit,” she instructed Kira.

  Jasmine completed the action for her.

  Nia fired three blasts. The particles shuddered as the high-powered sound wave passed over them, but the latticework remained intact.

  I need to be stronger! I need to break free.

  The Robus within Kira stirred, begging to be let out. Her mind felt clearer and sharper than it had since they landed on the world. So much power was right at her fingertips.

  Jasmine warned.

 

  the AI pleaded.

  Kira tried to hold back, but her pulse was quickening. The power called to her.

 

  The sweet call to transform began to fade.

  Kira looked down in horror to see what looked like stone solidifying around her feet and shins. She couldn’t take another step.

 

  Jasmine suggested.

  “Kinetics!” Kira shouted over the comm to her team. She managed to get her multi-handgun in position and started firing at her feet.

  Ari joined with Nia in unloading a magazine at her legs.

  Impacts registered on Kira’s HUD as the suit absorbed the fire.

  Kira managed to swing one leg forward.

 

  Kira sensed a shift in the controls as she took another step. The next came easier as she gained some momentum. “Find out where we are. Get the shuttle!” she ordered.

  “Already in progress,” Kyle replied.

  Ari and Nia continued firing well-placed shots around Kira’s feet to keep the particles from regaining a hold of her.

  “Stay, Kira,” a voice beckoned inside her head. “This is where you belong.”

  “Leave me the fok alone!” She blocked out the aliens’ calls, focusing on each step to the exit.

  She made it to Ari and Nia’s position.

  “Get her outside, Nia,” Ari said.

  He took up the rear while Nia and Kira cut through the path Kyle was helping to keep clear from the outside.

  The tunnel exited into a small clearing in the forest. A rock cliff towered behind them, but it was no longer solid stone; particles swirled above the surface.

  “Shite! Is this entire place going to come after us?” Kira checked her multi-handgun and saw that she was on her last magazine of kinetic rounds.

  “We’re two kilometers away from the landing site. Pod will be here in a minute,” Kyle reported.

  They’d need more than bullets to make it that long, if the entire cliff face disintegrated.

  “Hold them off!” Kira grabbed her plasma rifle off her back and sent a spray of fire across the sky.

  The particles glowed red for an instant as the plasma passed over them, and then they dropped to the ground as blacked specks.

  Over the tree canopy, Kira spotted the shuttle approaching.

  “Take off as soon as we’re all on board. We’re getting out of here!”

  “What about the data drive?” Nia asked.

  “Forget it. I have all the evidence I need that this place is hostile.” Kira sprayed her plasma fire into the swarm of particles, hoping to keep a clear a large enough area for the shuttle to land.

  The swarm gathered around the shuttle as it descended, coalescing into chains that extended toward the ground.

  “Little fokers think they can tether it!” Ari shot at one of the chains.

  “Get inside.” Kira ran for the back hatch as soon as it dropped open. “There’s no way they’re stronger than the engine.”

  The team piled into the shuttle while trying to hold off as many of the particles as they could. When everyone was inside, Kira slammed her hand on the button next to the door to close it.

  Kyle dove to the cockpit and activated the liftoff.

  “Shite, some of them are inside!” Nia flailed her arms in a vain attempt to shake them off.

  “Get us off the ground!” Kira urged Kyle.

  The shuttle rocketed upward a second later.

  Kira looked out the viewport and saw that the swarm hadn’t been able to keep up with the shuttle.

  “Everyone strap in,” she instructed.

  They all took their seats and secured the harness. As soon as everyone was ready, Kira hit the door control to open the back hatch.

  Intense wind ripped through the craft’s interior, rippling the belts and anything with a loose end. The little particles didn’t stand a chance.

  Kira left the hatch open for thirty seconds, but she was forced to close it when the shuttle reached the upper level of the artificial planet’s atmosphere. There could be some particles in the craft but not enough to do any damage.

  “Message the Raven that we’ll need to go through decontamination procedures,” Kira instructed. “I don’t want to take any risks that these things can replicate.”

  “Aye,” Kyle acknowledged.

  “That was really close.” Nia let out a long breath and slouched in her seat.

  Jasmine praised.

 

  The AI was silent for a moment.

 

 

  Kira’s heart dropped.

 

 

 

  Kira slumped in her seat. This may be the biggest mistake I’ve ever made.

  They rode the rest of the way to the Raven in silence.

  After the shuttle docked, the vessel and the team underwent a thorough decontamination and nanoscopic scan to make sure all particles had been removed
. Several hundred were found in crevasses within the shuttle and powered armor, and the samples were promptly incinerated.

  Once cleared, Kira and her team went up to the residential level to meet with Sandren.

  He was waiting for them in the galley. “What happened down there?” Despite his sharp tone, his expression was one of fatherly concern.

  “I feel like we simultaneously know more and less about what we’re up against, sir,” Kira began. She filled him in on the events leading up to their hasty retreat.

  “What a shiteshow,” Sandren muttered when she was finished.

  “Yes, sir, it really is.” Kira glanced at her team. “We’d like to make this right. I need to.”

  Sandren crossed his arms. “Well, you weren’t able to make contact with them in a meaningful way. That was our main hope—to resolve this conflict in a civil fashion.”

  “I didn’t get the impression they’re interested in talking. Reya and Nox sure talked a big game, but the chorus was different.” Kira paused. “Huh, I just thought of something. Reya and Nox were paired in a person for an extended time. I wonder if being around Tarans changed them?”

  The major tilted his head. “How so?”

  “Well, Nox and Reya spoke in Taran terms about their motivations when I interrogated them. And I was able to get inside their minds—maybe that’s because they had a frame of reference from their time in a Taran body. They had integrated our biological and social experience into their being, just like the race integrates technology,” Kira explained. “But what if I couldn’t force a connection with the other beings because they’ve never been in a form like ours? They didn’t have that frame of reference.”

  “Hmm.” Sandren stroked his chin. “How might we go about establishing that common vocabulary?”

  “Slow, dedicated outreach.”

  “We don’t have that luxury.”

  “I know, sir.”

  Sandren rose from the table. “I’ll talk to Kaen. Stand by.”

  — — —

  Waiting for news from field teams was always one of Kaen’s least favorite times as a commander. Situations such as this, when so much was on the line, made the waiting that much worse.

  He’d tried to keep himself distracted with the various administrative tasks his position demanded, but as the day stretched on, he found his task list looking a little thin.

  To his relief, a call from Major Sandren illuminated on his desktop. Finally!

  “Major, good to hear from you,” he greeted. “What news do you have about Gaelon?”

  “I wish the report was better. We found a gas giant in the system, and a dwarf planet, which by all measures is an artificial creation,” Sandren explained. “Kira and her team went down to the surface, but they were unable to enter into a meaningful discussion with the aliens. They were attacked on their way out, and… we may have a situation.”

  Kaen braced. “Which is?”

  “They were forced to leave behind an external processor.”

  Fok! Kaen fought to retain composure. “They left it there? This race is known to appropriate technology! How could they be so careless?”

  “They were under attack. There was no way to go back.”

  Kaen wiped his hands down his face. “We have no choice but to reformat our entire computer network now.”

  “That’s a drastic move, sir. Kira would like another chance to interface with them.”

  “If that route had any chance of success, it would have come about on this first visit. No. They could neutralize our defenses at any time. We need to act while we can.”

  “Yes, sir.” Sandren gave a grim nod.

  “Get back here to base. We’ll figure out our next steps.” Kaen severed the connection.

  As if these aliens weren’t going to be difficult enough to beat. He would have liked the opportunity to learn more about the technology they used, but knowing that the adaptive algorithms on the external processor were now in the aliens possession, there wasn’t time to figure out a long-term strategic play. They needed to hit the enemy hard and fast. If only we had some inside information of our own…

  — — —

  Ellen was still agitated after her field trip to the valley. What are they hiding down there?

  She hated having information dangled in front of her face and not knowing how to interpret it. The records they’d obtained from the facility were a disorganized mess. Only one bit of information stood out to her.

  She flipped through the items again on her temporary workstation in the Mysaran government office. The mining records stored at the remote site had to be significant. But why?

  Ellen looked at the production logs again. Not working in the mining industry, the volume number was meaningless to her in isolation. She brought up a calculator app on her desktop and divided the numbers by days in the year to get a feel for daily output.

  She frowned. It seemed like an unusually high volume, but it was entirely possible she was making something out of nothing. To be sure, she dug around in the computer system for the Mysaran annual report from the previous year to look at the GDP metrics.

  Her breath caught in her throat. “This can’t be right.”

  She re-checked her math. Did I get the timeframe wrong?

  When she verified her source data from the valley site, the numbers she’d used for her calculations checked out.

  “Trisha, Fiona, come in here, would you?” she called over the comm.

  A minute later, the two women arrived from their own offices.

  “Yes?” Trisha asked.

  “Take a look at this. Am I missing something?” Ellen flipped the information displayed on her desk so they could get a better look.

  Fiona frowned. “That can’t be right.”

  Trisha shook her head. “How could mining production be five times more than all the materials used on the entire planet?”

  “I was wondering the same thing.” Ellen slumped back in her chair.

  She could understand production being one, or maybe even two, times Mysar’s own consumption, due to trade within the system, but five times… She couldn’t even wrap her head around where the labor resources would come from to extract the material.

  “I can’t find records for what happened to any of the ore,” Ellen continued. “It’s noted in these logs as being mined, and then it just disappears.”

  “Material on that scale doesn’t just go away.” Fiona crossed her arms. “Someone is hiding it.”

  Ellen pointed to the absurd quantity of ore. “Where could anyone possible hide that?”

  “In that underground facility, maybe?” Trisha ventured.

  “Why pull it out of the ground only to stick it back in the ground elsewhere?” Ellen shook her head. “That doesn’t make sense.”

  “Do you think it was transported offworld?” Fiona asked.

  Trisha scowled. “If that’s the case, then to where?”

  “There is one other place I’ve heard mentioned in relation to these aliens,” Ellen replied, deciding that ‘need-to-know’ included these two allies. “Gaelon. As challenging as it would be to get the materials over there, it makes more sense than hiding a bunch of ore somewhere on Mysar.”

  “Gaelon?” Fiona said with a raised eyebrow. “There’s nothing in that system.”

  “Actually, I had always heard it was too dangerous to venture into because of radiation,” Trisha countered.

  “On Valta, they told us it was a bad place but gave no real explanation,” Ellen said. “Needless to say, that’s a lot of talk with nothing to substantiate it. Given we were also not told that the Mysaran chancellor was actually an alien puppet, I think it’s safe to say that we’ve been misled over the years.”

  “I can’t argue with that,” Fiona conceded.

  Trisha nodded. “Now that there’s a new source of information, we need to reset our understanding.”

  “I agree,” Ellen said, “which is why I wanted to run this by you. Thi
s evidence points to a conspiracy on a scale that’s beyond our capability to address on our own.”

  “Did you find anything else in the data from the facility aside from the mining records?” Fiona asked.

  “Perhaps, but I have to admit I’m not sure what I’m looking at. There’s a ton of information here, but it looks like it’s encrypted somehow—or completely disorganized. I don’t know.”

  Fiona looked over her shoulder. “Something about this is familiar…”

  “If the goings on in that place are as messed up as they seem, we need to get the information to someone who can interpret it.”

  Across the table, Fiona’s face paled. “Wait, I know where I’ve seen this code before! It’s what Hale used when she wrote messages to the people we now know were subverted.”

  Ellen looked up from the desktop. “We need to get this to the Tararian Guard.”

  CHAPTER 12

  I’ve never had a mission go so foking wrong, Kira chastised herself while the Raven made its final approach to Orion Station.

  She’d tried to keep the thought private, but she felt Jasmine pick up on her feelings.

  the AI soothed.

 

 

  Kira only shook her head in response.

  Sandren had been surprisingly understanding about the situation, but Kira doubted Kaen would be so forgiving. She was already walking a fine line with field ops, following her unexpected upgrade to a Robus, and such a gross error that compromised the Guard’s security might tip her over to a desk job—or worse.

  Except I’d die in an office post. Though she was sure Leon would be thrilled, it was hardly a deciding factor when she envisioned her future career path.

  Jasmine said.

 

 

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