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The Clockwork Chimera Series Books 1-3 Box Set

Page 50

by Scott Baron


  “Shit, it’s so fast! Go right! I mean left!”

  A kick landed, sending Daisy flying across the room. Her ribs, accustomed to Tamara’s frequent punishment, withstood the blow, not even cracking after all the long months of constant abuse and healing.

  Another explosion rocked the building, putting the fight on hold as the two opponents scurried for cover as more debris fell around them.

  “Daisy! Sword!”

  She saw what Sarah was referring to. The blast had shifted the stone pinning her backpack to the ground, and Daisy took a running dive for it. The Chithiid reached for her with its powerful hands, but all four came up with air as she narrowly avoided its grasp.

  Daisy’s gloved hand grasped the deadly weapon and whipped it free from its scabbard as her legs absorbed the momentum of her roll, springing her back toward the alien.

  “Die, you fucker!” she cried out, swinging the sword at the beast’s neck.

  At the last second the alien shifted on its feet, narrowly avoiding the full force of her swing. The sword flew true, but rather than slicing through its shoulder, the dull blade merely smacked into its flesh. The alien bellowed in pain, but its body remained most certainly intact.

  The Chithiid quickly retreated, hands yanking free deadly pieces of debris with which to defend itself.

  Daisy realized her mistake and tucked the blade under her arm as she frantically stripped the gloves from her hands. She grabbed the sword’s grip again, and this time her bare flesh felt that familiar warmth as she took hold. A tiny pulse went up her arms, straight into her body. An uneasy yet natural connection to the dangerous weapon.

  Makes sense, I suppose. It is grown from a piece of me, after all. But somehow it felt like even more than just that.

  The Chithiid had managed to pull free three wicked-looking pieces of sharp steel rebar from the rubble and began circling her, twirling each in its hands as it sized up its opponent. Finally, it lunged, swinging two of the bars in tandem, hoping to overpower its surprisingly resilient human foe.

  Daisy swung her blade, and this time the outcome was more to her liking, as it easily sliced through the steel rebar like it was nothing more than a thin piece of bamboo.

  The startled Chithiid looked at the stumps of metal in its hands and threw them to the ground in disgust.

  “Cursed creature! I will rend you limb from limb and shame the name of your forefathers!”

  Daisy stared hard at the alien.

  “Oh yeah? Well I’m gonna cut your arms into little pieces and then shove them up your ass,” she yelled back. “And fuck your forefathers!”

  Her verbal barrage had the opposite effect as she intended.

  The Chithiid stopped in its tracks, a truly confused look in all four of its eyes.

  “You speak our language?” it said, stunned.

  Shit, was I just speaking Chithiid? When did that happen? she wondered.

  “Apparently so,” Sarah answered.

  “No human has ever spoken our language. Not once in all the years,” it said. Its voice, she noted, sounded masculine.

  Okay, so I know it’s a guy. That doesn’t really help the situation, though.

  “Why do you attack us?” the alien asked.

  “Attack you? You’re the ones who attacked us!” Daisy felt her anger rising. “Hell, I had never even set foot on this planet until a few months ago, and your buddies attacked me then too!”

  The Chithiid lowered his arms somewhat. “That was you?”

  “Yeah, that was me.”

  The alien’s posture changed. Relaxed ever so slightly.

  “Listen to what I tell you, strange human. Things are not as they seem. We are not your enemy. This is a conflict built on lies and deceit.”

  Daisy hesitated, unsure. “What do you mean? I’m new to this whole global-conquest-fight-for-survival thing.”

  He lowered his arms and dropped the metal bars to the ground. “There is much to discuss.”

  From the direction of the buried doorway, sounds of digging through the rubble reached their ears.

  “On my honor, and that of my forefathers, what I say is the truth.”

  The sounds of digging were growing closer, and human voices could be heard through the rubble.

  “There is a tall building in the direction of the setting sun. Meet me there after sunset. At that time, our scouts and work crews will be returning to their quarters, and we will have the opportunity to speak uninterrupted.”

  “Why should I trust you?” Daisy asked.

  “Because I am hoping you wish to see an end to this conflict, as do I. No more lives need be wasted. Please, come. I shall wait for you there. I promise on my honor that no harm shall befall you.”

  More debris shifted as voices grew louder.

  The alien quickly turned, and with a great leap from his powerful legs, flew high up the wall, scrambling out a hole in the wrecked stone cupola high above.

  “What the hell was that? What were you saying?”

  “You’re in my head, you should know.”

  “I’m just a ride-along, Daisy, and I don’t speak monster.”

  “Daisy! Are you okay? Diana? Richard? Anyone alive in there?”

  “Yeah, I’m here,” Daisy replied, sheathing her sword and retrieving her backpack. “The others didn’t make it.”

  Vince hurried through the gap made in the debris and pulled her into a fierce hug. “I was worried about you. Are you sure you’re not hurt? We saw you chased in here, followed by those four Chithiid. A few engaged the others a few blocks away, but we came after you. We took out two of the bastards that circled around outside, but then there was an explosion––”

  “Richard. He had a fucking bomb strapped to his back.” She looked around the chamber as Arthur and his squad quietly retrieved anything that hadn’t been destroyed in the collapse. “I was the only survivor, and just barely at that.”

  “Why are you lying to him, Daisy?”

  Because until I know what’s going on, I don’t want to say anything. I need solid information before I go stirring the pot.

  Arthur walked over to her and looked her up and down. “I am glad to see you are intact, Daisy. I am sorry I cannot say the same of the others.”

  His squad brought their haul for him to inspect. Five pulse rifles, two supply packs, a dented alien comm device, and one wrist gauntlet. Arthur tried the comm unit, but the rattling of shattered parts inside made it clear it was damaged beyond function. He tossed it aside and was about to do the same with the gauntlet when Daisy stopped him.

  “Don’t throw that away. Have you seen what they can do?”

  Arthur smiled at her as if she were a child.

  “We’ve collected many of these over the years, Daisy. Not a single one has ever functioned. Alma says she believes they are tied directly into the invaders’ genetics somehow. All this is, is a piece of junk.” He tossed the surprisingly light band to her. “You can have it as a trophy of battle if you like, but it’s nothing of any use or value.”

  “It’s pretty, at least,” Daisy said, slipping it onto her wrist. And I have a hunch I just might be able to get this thing working, given the opportunity.

  The survivors slowly crawled back out into the fresh air. No other Chithiid had arrived yet, but it would probably only be a matter of time.

  “We will not be able to make it to Vincent’s ship before nightfall,” Arthur said. “And we are nowhere near an access point. Much as it pains me to say this, I believe we will have to make camp above ground in one of the buildings. David, Josiah, go scout us a secure place to spend the night. No windows, and easily defensible.”

  The two young men took off at a trot.

  “We could still make it,” Daisy said. “The darkness might even help hide our movement.”

  Arthur shook his head. “No. There are things other than the invaders that roam these streets at night. After our losses today, the safest thing to do is to wait it out until morning.”
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  Less than ten minutes later the scouts returned.

  “There is a suitable space just two streets over.”

  Arthur wasn’t thrilled with the option, but they packed up and moved out quickly. While the hiding place was perhaps a bit too close to the site of their battle, the building was the most secure they could find in the immediate area.

  “Good job, you two. Now go find the others and bring them to our camp. Alma willing, they’re still alive.”

  The scouts nodded once and took off at a run, while the surviving team followed Arthur up the road until they were safely tucked away in the heart of a nearby office tower.

  Underground in her control chamber, Alma spoke to the assembled elders of her subterranean tribe.

  “I have called you to me, my people, to tell you our day is coming.”

  “Praise be!” they called out.

  “Soon we will have the means to spread the word. To expand beyond this place. To reach out and touch the great minds across the globe, and even those far away in the sky above!”

  The assembled group listened with rapt attention.

  “I promise you, my children, that in just a few days’ time, we will be blessed. Blessed and able to share the glory with my brothers and sisters wherever they may be, in but the blink of an eye.”

  The tribesmen and women filtered out of the chamber, leaving only her most loyal and trusted helpers.

  “Make preparations,” she said. “Through the help of our wonderful new friends, life as we know it will be changing, and for the better.”

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Far across Dark Side Base, a six-legged mech slowly emerged from a secret hangar door hidden in the rocky wall. Cautiously, it stepped onto the dusty surface of the moon.

  “Ooh, look at all of that!” Freya giggled with glee as her remote-controlled mech transmitted visuals back to her inside the massive hangar. “This is so neat!” she reveled. “But I’d better be careful, or Daisy will be upset,” she reminded herself as the service machine began wandering the area.

  Controlling all six legs as well as the multitude of arms and gripping attachments housed on the unit was as natural as breathing to the young AI. If she breathed, that is. In any case, she was enjoying this first taste of freedom outside the only home she had ever known, and she pushed the mech to move even faster as she sped it across the rocky plain.

  Inside Dark Side Base, Sid halted his briefing mid-sentence.

  “What is it?” Commander Mrazich asked, a little concern in his voice.

  “I sense… something,” the AI replied.

  “Care to be a little less vague?”

  “I am not sure what it is, but there appears to be movement on the surface, just at the periphery of my scanning area.”

  “Chithiid?” Mrazich asked, his alarm rising.

  “No, it does not appear that anything has touched down from space.” Sid clicked open the comms. “Bob, are you and Donovan prepped for a quick flight?”

  “Sure, we can be out in less than three. What’s up?” the pilot asked.

  “I am uncertain. Something is reading on my scans, and I would very much like you to take a look. I will send the coordinates now.”

  “I’ve got them,” Bob replied. “Launching momentarily. We’ll be there in a couple of minutes.”

  “Thank you. It may be nothing, but given our current circumstances, I prefer to take no chances.”

  Meanwhile, a giddy AI galloped her new six-legged toy across the rugged surface of the moon.

  “Hey, that looks like igneous rock,” she exclaimed, redirecting the unit toward a large rock outcropping next to a deep crater. “I wonder if it was originally that way, or if the heat of the Chithiid attack melted it that way.”

  The mech raced along the crater’s rim as Freya focused in on the curious rocks.

  Without warning, the machine stumbled, its connection briefly lost as Freya realized she had sent it outside the meager range of its wireless remote system.

  “NO!” she cried out as the mech tumbled over the edge of the crater, falling end-over-end into its depths, triggering a minor rock slide in its wake, before smashing to the bottom, where it was promptly buried by tons of debris.

  “NO! NOT FAIR!” Freya yelled, sending multiple systems in her hangar into a frenzy of motion as her powerful mind succumbed to an uncontrolled temper tantrum as she lashed out. The sudden flurry of activity in her hangar shocked her into calmness.

  “Oh,” she said quietly. “I didn’t know I could do that.” A quiet filled the space as she considered the implications. “I wonder…”

  The entirety of the hidden facility’s machinery surged to life, and Freya giggled with delight. She scanned the hangar, taking in all the wonderful machinery at her disposal.

  “Ooh, I have an idea!” she purred, then started happily humming to herself as she set to work spooling up the machinery and logging herself into the nearest mech unit.

  The dust at the rim of the crater was still hanging in the low gravity of the moon as Bob flew over.

  “You see anything, buddy?” Donovan asked.

  “Nope. It looks like there was a pretty good-sized rock slide, is all.”

  “Copy that. Sid, did you hear that?”

  “Yes, Donovan. Thank you for your assistance. Again, it is better to be safe than sorry now that we have people potentially coming in contact with the Chithiid. Come on back.”

  “Will do,” Donovan replied, changing course back to Hangar Two.

  Sid and Mal resumed their briefing on possible options and outcomes, depending on how the mission below went. Bob, having conducted countless scanning runs over the years, also had much to add to the assessment.

  Commander Mrazich, Captain Harkaway, and their team listened carefully as the AI minds of Dark Side put their collective heads together.

  “If we do make contact, and if the network is amenable to our plan, then I do believe this particular ship, one of Daisy’s more radical designs, should we actually be able to salvage the right parts to construct it, might very well have the speed and maneuverability in atmospheric conditions to evade Chithiid defenses when it shows on scans,” Sid posited.

  “Agreed. In theory, anyway,” Mal said. “However, having recently suffered from unexpected systems failures and outright sabotage, I have been forced to acknowledge that perhaps our design parameters are simply not as robust as we believe them to be.”

  “Speak for yourself,” Bob chimed in. “I’m perfect just the way I am.”

  “Yes, Bob, but you also are operating a much smaller craft. I worry what may happen if we attempt to retrofit you to these specifications.”

  “What about the drone/remote idea you were talking about previously?” Harkaway said. “That sounded like a feasible plan. Overwhelm the alien defenses by sheer numbers of ‘dumb’ ships flown by remote. Hell, we have enough barely-functional heaps around here to make a go of it, and it would be one hell of an expendable diversion. We might even be able to retrofit the few lower-tier AIs running equipment for flight use.”

  “Yes, Captain, that’s still an option we are discussing as well, but really, all of this is academic until we hear back from Ms. Swarthmore,” Sid said.

  “Point taken. Well, you three keep at it, and let me know if there’s anything you need.”

  “We will, Captain. Thank you.”

  Captain Harkaway stepped from the command center and walked the long corridors of Dark Side, wondering what his missing crew were up to, and if they were even still alive. He stopped outside Chu’s lab door and leaned inside.

  “Still no word?” Harkaway asked.

  “Nothing yet, Captain,” Chu said, not looking up from his work table. Tamara sat beside him, equally engrossed in their Faraday suit modification project.

  “Very well,” he said. “Let me know the moment you hear anything.”

  “Yes, sir. Will do.”

  Captain Harkaway turned and left them to the
ir work.

  “You know, I think with the progress we’ve been making, we might even be able to make one of these things robust enough to mask something as inorganic as Barry or Ash,” Chu mused.

  “Maybe,” Tamara said, “but I still think we’re far better suited for the mission.”

  “Yeah, I suppose so. Still, it’s an intriguing idea, though, isn’t it?”

  Tamara said nothing.

  “I hope Daisy’s all right down there,” Chu commented a moment later.

  “I’m sure she is.”

  “And I hope she’s being careful,” he added.

  At that, Tamara couldn’t help but laugh.

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  “No, I don’t need you coming with me,” Daisy said, this time a bit more forcefully. Vince’s badgering was well-intentioned, but she had ulterior motives she didn’t care to let anyone in on just yet.

  “It’s too dangerous to go alone,” he insisted.

  “Remember, I was fine down here all alone for days last time. I don’t think a little scouting will kill me, Vince. I’m a big girl, and I can do this on my own. Besides, it’ll be a lot quieter without you stomping around.”

  Vince gave her a playfully hurt look.

  “I do not stomp. I just have bigger feet than you, is all.”

  “Uh-huh,” she shot back with a little chuckle.

  “Vincent is right, though, Daisy,” Josiah said between bites of roasted rabbit. “You would be safer with an escort.”

  The grease dripping from his chin made it a little hard to take him seriously.

  Daisy had surprised their small team with not only the vegetables she managed to source from the overgrown plots of soil they passed on their trek to Vince’s ship, but also with the fresh game she easily caught with a little bit of tracking know-how and a few carefully placed snares.

  She felt a little bad for the furry critters, but between the hiking and fighting, and Sarah burning up a metric ton of much-needed energy watching her back, she was making sure to load up on every ounce of protein she could get.

 

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