Titanborn: (Children of Titan Book 1)

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Titanborn: (Children of Titan Book 1) Page 21

by Rhett C. Bruno


  We approached them slowly, their eyes scrutinizing us. Our disguises could only get us so far, considering that I wasn’t tall enough to fill mine out. The clunky fit probably made me look absurd. I didn’t have time to check a mirror. I did, however, make sure to approach from an angle so that Trevor wouldn’t notice my pistol.

  “I didn’t hear about Rylah sending anyone up,” Trevor said. “What does she want?”

  Whether Rylah had helped with the bombing or not, there was no question she was involved enough with what was happening on Titan for a Venta Co collector to know who she was.

  “She wants to speak with the Doctor,” I said, voice distorted by my helmet so he wouldn’t recognize it. “He’s causing her trouble.”

  “What Doctor?” Trevor scowled and made his pistol more visible. “Sorry, boys, but we’re under strict orders. Nobody gets in. We pay good money for this hangar, so tell her to come herself if she wants anything.” He leaned in close and whispered, “If you two get caught sneaking around here again, you and that bitch are all dead.”

  I bit my tongue. It was usually advised that we try to avoid conflict with other powerful corporations. Trust me, it’s amazing how one little gunfight can turn into a decades-long grudge. As I thought about what to say next, Zhaff must’ve seen an opening because he said, “I’m going to strike them, Malcolm.”

  He sprang into action, and before they could raise their weapons, he had torn them from their hands and had his pistol aimed at the side of Trevor’s head on an angle that would allow him to take both of them out with a single shot. They extended their hands in surrender. The guard looked scared, like he hadn’t seen much action in his life, but Trevor remained calm as a collector ought to. I knew beneath his stony façade, his heart was racing.

  Knowing who Zhaff really was, I quickly realized that anything he did against Venta Co came with the highest level of permission. I had no problem playing along. I drew my weapon and aimed it at the receptionist, getting her to raise her hands so she couldn’t alert anybody.

  “Up,” I said. “Away from the desk and against the wall.” She listened. By the time she got there, she was in tears.

  “You’re going to pay for this, Ringers,” Trevor growled.

  I ignored him. “‘I’m going to strike them now,’” I said to Zhaff, trying my best to mimic his flat voice. “Really?”

  “You said to warn you first next time,” he replied.

  I smirked. “I suppose I asked for that.”

  “Hey!” Trevor raised his voice, clearly irritated that nobody was paying attention to him. It was going to make it all the sweeter when he found out who I was. “Do you know who you’re messing with?”

  “Now we do.” I lifted the visor of my helmet and stared Trevor straight in the eyes. His expression was priceless. His jaw dropped, and the fear he’d been masking started to show. “How’s your arm?” I asked.

  “Graves? I knew there was something off about seeing a Ringer so short.”

  “Yet you still opened up. Like it’s your first day on the job.”

  “Let me guess. That’s your pet partner?”

  I took a brief pause from watching the receptionist to grab Trevor by the chest, yank him forward, and punch him across the jaw. It felt good to release all the frustration of having to see Rylah again on someone who deserved it. Plus, only I was allowed to call her a bitch. I caught him before he fell and shoved him right back into position next to Zhaff’s pistol.

  “He prefers Zhaff,” I said.

  “C’mon, Graves…” Trevor moaned as he rubbed a cut on his lip. “Even you’re not this stupid. Gonna start a war just because I called you both a few names?”

  “No, but over what you’re hiding back there I might. Why don’t you let us in and we’ll keep this civilized.”

  “We’re not hiding anything.”

  “Lying,” Zhaff stated. He pressed the barrel of his pistol against Trevor’s head so hard it threaded his hair.

  “You shouldn’t lie to my friend here,” I advised. “Open the hangar, or he’ll shoot you both down like the Venta scum you are.”

  “Sorry, Graves, no can do,” Trevor said. “Best walk away now.”

  I stepped forward so that our noses were close to touching and glowered into his eyes. “Last chance, Cross. Open the hangar, or you’ll upset him.”

  “When our bosses hear about this, they’ll have you and your pet sweeping floors until he’s as old as you are.”

  I decided to take a page out of Zhaff’s book. I shot Trevor in the shoulder of the same arm I’d injured earlier, then returned to aiming at the receptionist. It was in the meat, but he fell over, screaming.

  “Are you insane!” Trevor howled. “I’ll have you both spaced!”

  “Open it,” I said to the other guard, who was staring as Trevor squirmed in pain. He was definitely rattled.

  “Answer him,” Zhaff ordered. He stepped around Trevor and took aim directly at the guard’s head.

  The guard took a deep breath before he glanced down at Trevor. “I’m not dying for them,” he muttered. “There are Ringers inside. They paid a ton for safe transport from Mars. I don’t know or care what they’ve got, but I’ll let you in if you tell that one not to shoot.”

  I nodded in Zhaff’s direction, and he grabbed the guard by the collar and dragged him toward the hangar entrance’s control panel. “Enter the code,” Zhaff said to him.

  “Coward…” Trevor said through clenched teeth.

  I knelt beside him, keeping my gun visible while we waited.

  “You… you have him handling everything for you now, old man?” Trevor asked me, struggling to put on his usual grin. He was in too much pain. His armor softened the blow enough for his arm not to fall off, but a pulse-pistol round from that close meant it went clear through him.

  “Impressive, isn’t he?” I remarked.

  He tried to sit up but failed. “You might as well kill me, Malcolm… because you signed a death warrant.”

  “I’m disappointed in you. Aiding terrorists? You should know better than that.”

  “I… have my… orders.”

  “So do I.” The pain had him breathing heavily and looking ready to pass out. I leaned in close so he could hear me. “I’ll see you soon, Cross. And for Earth’s sake, would you buy a new pistol already?”

  Before he could respond, I cracked him in the head with the butt of my gun, knocking him unconscious. “Get him help,” I barked to the receptionist. “Now!” I shot her computer, causing it to burst into sparks so that it’d be useless to her. She ran frantically out of the lobby. As good as it felt to put him in his place, we were collectors. It wasn’t my job to kill for free.

  I got up and looked over at the hangar entrance. Zhaff had punched the guard across the face, incapacitating him as well. The heavy gate was unlocked and slowly rose into the ceiling. I hurried over to him.

  “You ready?” I asked.

  “Ready,” he replied.

  I reached into a pouch on my belt where I’d put Aria’s Ark figurine, brought it to my lips, and gave it a kiss.

  “Why do you do that?” Zhaff asked.

  “For good luck. It was my daughter’s. I like to think it reminds me of mistakes I’ve made, and not to make them again.”

  Zhaff nodded. We edged into the hangar side by side, pulse-pistols raised. A small ship was parked in the center, and four armed Children of Titan combatants in concealing white armor stood around the lowered cargo bay ramp. The same orange circle we had seen in the attack on the Piccolo was imprinted on their chests. Two storage containers stood upright among them, stamped with the Pervenio logo. The supplies stolen from New London, if I had to guess.

  They quickly hand-signed something to one another before opening fire on us with the same model of outmoded Venta Co rifles as earlier. Zhaff and I dove behind the steely base of a decontamination chamber right before a spray of bullets riddled us with holes.

  “Stand down, fugitiv
es!” Zhaff shouted as he popped up to fire off a few shots of his own. I tried to do the same but was immediately forced back into cover. One of the bullets struck my spotters latched to my belt and shattered them.

  “Damn!” I grunted. We were in a stalemate like that for about a minute, and being that it was a private hangar, there was no Darien security near enough to hear the scuffle through the colony block’s dense metal walls.

  Zhaff’s eye-lens aimed at me and he motioned with his hand that he was going to try to make an approach.

  “I’ll cover you,” I whispered, though it was probably closer to a shout so he could hear me over the gunfire.

  We went to make our move, and an explosion shook the floor. I yanked Zhaff back and popped up to see a smoking gash in the outer plating of Darien, exposing us to the exterior. Freezing air whipped in and I could feel its bite even through my suit. Alarms wailed, red emergency lights flashed, and the entrance to the hangar sealed shut with a snap-hiss. If Pervenio security wasn’t aware of the disturbances earlier, they were then.

  That was when the combatants each grabbed the containers and raised their arms, revealing orange carbon-fiber wings extending between their arms and sides. They were promptly pulled through the breach and soared out across the sky of Titan until the haze of a violent storm rendered them invisible.

  “Winged suits,” Zhaff identified.

  “You’ve got to be kidding me!” I shouted. “I thought those things were myths the locals told to scare new immigrants.” Before being outlawed following the arrival of my people, it was said the Ringers once had suits allowing them to roam the skies as easily as birds do on Earth thanks to the low gravity and dense atmosphere of Titan.

  “There are no such things as myths.”

  Zhaff sprang up and sprinted toward the opening. I stood to follow him, closing my visor as I did so my nose didn’t freeze off. “What the hell are you doing?” I questioned, grabbing his shoulder before he leaped blindly through the opening.

  “I have a read on their position. If we don’t follow, we’ll lose them. There is no time to deliberate.”

  “We’ll freeze out there!”

  “We are wearing similar suits,” he replied. “They are capable of withstanding Titan’s harsh environment for a substantial period and contain a suitable auxiliary oxygen supply in case of emergency.”

  “Are you sure?” I checked the seal beneath my helmet nervously. The rickety joints, especially in mine since it was so loose, had me worried that I wouldn’t last more than a minute outside.

  “Yes.”

  I took a deep breath. It’s safe to say that I would’ve never trusted it without his nod of approval, but up to that point, he seemed to be very sure of things before he said them. And he never lied.

  “Ready when you are, then,” I muttered.

  We sidled out to the edge, where even through my helmet, I could hear the wind howl. The ground wasn’t that far below us, but beyond that, the visibility conditions were too poor due to a looming storm to see anything. Zhaff hopped off without hesitation and skated down the slick, angled surface of Darien’s enclosure.

  “I’m getting too old for this,” I whispered to myself.

  I shrugged, swallowed my pride, and tried to emulate him. I can’t say I made it look as smooth, but my feet landed safely against the gentle slope of the translucent roof encasing Darien’s hydro-farms. A layer of swirling sand made it impossible to see the green beneath.

  NINETEEN

  I followed Zhaff as he jogged headfirst into the storm. They were common on Titan, much as they were on the planet it orbited. I couldn’t see more than ten meters in front of me with all the sand being whipped about, and without my spotters, I was blind. I had to rely completely on Zhaff’s eye-lens to keep a reading on the smugglers, and his word that our suits would hold up.

  “You’re sure about these things?” I asked him again. We didn’t have a com-link; I had to yell so my voice would project over the storm through my helmet’s built-in speaker.

  “Yes,” he answered.

  My whole suit bounced with every step, and I found it unsettling that I could hear the wind so clearly through it. I could even see my own breath against my visor because it grew so cold inside the helmet. Well below freezing, though that was admittedly better than the two hundred or so Celsius below it was beyond it.

  After ten more minutes of slogging through the murk, the storm dissipated and Zhaff stopped. I moved next to him and gazed forward.

  Based on the few times I’d been beyond the major settlements on Mars, I found the terrain of the worlds quite similar in appearance. The biggest difference was that even when it wasn’t stormy, the sky of Titan was blotted by a rusty haze so thick that the location of the sun was impossible to determine. It made things not only dim but also frigid enough to freeze your bones in half a minute. Pervenio researchers claimed the terraforming efforts using cryo-volcanic eruptions across the surface to pump the atmosphere with oxygen had warmed average surface temperatures by a few degrees and even left trace amounts of the element permanently in the air. True or not, I wasn’t about to test it. People loved to exaggerate.

  Once we escaped the hydro-farms’ roof, the fine-grained, ruddy sand that made up most of the region extended beyond my range of vision in every direction, with thousands of smooth, frozen rocks scattered across the flat landscape. Now that I could see them, it made it difficult for me to walk in a straight line, even in my weighted suit. They didn’t seem to bother Zhaff.

  In the distance rose a lonely white plateau beyond which the visibility remained extremely poor. The earlier storm had passed, but there another brewed. Bolts of lightning flashing throughout the dark clouds above them were enough to tell me that this one was going to be far worse. I didn’t want to be caught in it.

  “They went in there,” Zhaff said. “The Darien Quarantine Zone.”

  He pointed toward the plateau. It didn’t look special, but a tram line ran across the surface of Titan between Darien and it, entering an illuminated cave carved into its side. It was taking me a bit to gain my bearings, but he was right. Within it lay the quarantine zone where I’d never had any reason to go. Zhaff and I shifted our path to stick to the shadows of its tram lines’ towering stilts.

  “Looks like we’re on our own, then,” I said. “No way Pervenio would risk the blowback of publicly sending Earther reinforcements into a quarantine zone. That’s probably what the Children of Titan want them to do.”

  “You are correct,” Zhaff replied. “I will inform the director of the situation.” He typed into his hand-terminal.

  “Fifty years since the Reunion,” I said while I waited. “You’d think they’d have cleaned them out by now.”

  “The increase in immigration has helped keep sickness a constant threat to locals. All it takes is one missed microorganism during decontamination or shipment to infect an entire block.”

  I remembered how sick the Ringer on Earth had looked. How he was coughing up blood before he took his own life. I’d never actually been to a quarantine zone, but I couldn’t imagine a more depressing place in all of Sol. They were among the only places on Titan where the Ringers were granted some level of control, minus the legions of Pervenio security guards who monitored the entrances off the tram lines. Whatever this Doctor and his crew were up to, there were few better places in the Ring for them to hide.

  All Ringers who showed signs of sickness were sent to quarantine, buried like ancient lepers within a mountain. It didn’t matter what the diseases were either. Most of them had no labels, or did once, but no longer affected Earthers and had their names lost in the annals of pre-Meteorite Earth. All I knew for sure was that getting the proper medicines from any of the sanctioned USF corporations with a stake in the Ring was as difficult as it was expensive. They were almost exclusively produced on Earth by Pervenio Corp and its subcontractor and shipped all the way across Sol.

  “Consider me lucky for not being born
in this wasteland,” I decided. “How’d they get in? The entrance to that rock can only be accessed through the tram line.”

  “Their signatures disappeared beneath it,” Zhaff answered.

  “Well, however they did it, I have a feeling that the Drayton woman who escaped got out the same way. We’ll find it.”

  “We have to.” Zhaff stored his hand-terminal and scanned the horizon. “The quarantine zone enclosure is approximately eight-point-seven kilometers away. We must quicken our pace in order to ensure we retain a safe amount of oxygen and do not freeze.”

  He’d conveniently left that part out earlier. I unconsciously cut down on how deep my breaths were, and we ran. He was decidedly faster, but I was able to keep close enough behind. Fear of suffocating had my adrenaline pumping and my legs churning despite how sore they were getting. If I was going to go, I’d prefer it to be in a hail of bullets or while I was drunk and fast asleep.

  As we got nearer, the quarantine zone’s plateau filled my vision from end to end, obstructing the subtle glow of the rusty sky. Not even a single translucency interrupted the uniformity of the rock for the people inside.

  I was busy studying the tunnel entrance located many meters above where we were, when Zhaff suddenly stopped. A noisy tram raced by overhead, breaking the alien silence of Titan’s surface that had prevailed after the first storm passed.

  “What’re you doing?” I yelled over the racket. I leaned over to catch my breath.

  He didn’t answer right away. As soon as the tram went by completely, the fizzle of gunfire zipped around my helmet, kicking up pockets of sand directly beside us. We rushed behind one of the tram lines’ columns for cover. The barrage came from above, and it didn’t relent.

  I fired a few rounds blindly from behind the column to try to scare whoever it was before taking a quick peek around it. A group of objects darted across the ruddy sky, the flash of pulse-rifle muzzles giving away their positions. They were too small to be ships.

 

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