RECON MARINES
P.K. Hawkins
Copyright 2017 by Severed Press
www.severedpress.com
June 18, 2147 (Earth Calendar)
1433 Greenwich Mean Time
Location: Troop Transport Franklin Dixon, Near Ganymede
Marine Heartbeats Detected on Ship: 54
“Bad news, kids,” a voice said through the overhead intercom. “Shore leave’s been cancelled.”
The Recon Marines in the mess hall collectively groaned. Many of them cursed. One of them, although Marsden didn’t see who, angrily threw a wad of synthetic mashed potatoes at the wall. Marsden, however, had the opposite reaction. He laughed.
“Told you!” he said to everyone else that had been sitting at his table. “Pay up!”
“Man, you’re a sicko,” Llewellyn said as she unclipped her personal data monitor from the front of her uniform. “What kind of twisted bastard actually bets against us getting shore leave again?”
“The kind of twisted bastard that knows how things work around here and likes money,” Marsden said as he unclipped his own PDM and held it out over the center of the table. “Come on. Mossier, Chunda, you too. I believe that was five hundred scripunits each?” Mossier and Chunda both grumbled as they took out their PDMs, keyed in the amount of money they needed to transfer, and passed them over Marsden’s PDM. Once Llewellyn did the same, Marsden checked the PDM’s screen to make sure they hadn’t shorted him. He had fifteen hundred more scripunits in his personal account now.
“Laugh it up while you can,” Chunda grumbled at him. “One of these days you’re going to bet against shore leave, and then you won’t be coming back from that particular mission to spend your ill-gotten gains.” He put his PDM back and stood up. “See you all at the pods.”
Axel, the only other person at Marsden’s table, shook her head as the other three left. “I don’t understand why they haven’t learned yet. The odds of any Recon Marine ever getting to experience a full shore leave are twenty-three to one.”
“And when did you have time to calculate those odds?” Marsden asked her with a grin. She cocked her head as if that was the strangest question she had ever heard.
“Just now. Why?”
Marsden just shook his head. He had no doubt that she had indeed just figured that out in her head over the last several seconds, and that she honestly couldn’t comprehend why no one else could do the same. Unlike the others, who hadn’t bothered to put their lunch trays back into the cleaning unit as a sort of petty revenge at their situation, Marsden and Axel both properly disposed of their trays. A cleaning robot would be around to take care of any mess that got left behind while the marines were all in dilation-sleep, but Marsden felt bad about leaving messes behind for others to clean up, even if the one cleaning was a bot with no programmed personality. Axel, he assumed, took care of her own tray simply because it was the most logical thing to do.
“You sure you don’t want to make any bets on what the mission is this time?” Marsden asked Axel as they left the mess hall. Everyone else had already gone and would now either be in their sleep pods or else prepping for them. Marsden didn’t see any reason to hurry. Although the ship would be set to jump in the next ten minutes, it had safety features in place that would keep the ship from light jumping if it didn’t detect that every living being on board was tucked away safely.
“You don’t fool me, Marsden,” Axel said. The woman couldn’t really be said to have friends, but she said the words with the closest thing she was capable of to affection. “You always win your bets. Always. That sort of thing is statistically impossible, so it stands to reason that you either somehow manipulate the events ahead of time or, as would be more likely in this case, you have some prior knowledge of what is happening.”
Marsden kept a straight face. “Don’t be silly. How would I know in advance about something like this? Even the command pilots don’t know where we’re going until minutes before they have to get into their pods.”
“I don’t know,” Axel said. Her tone clearly indicated that she was annoyed that there was something she couldn’t figure out. “But it’s the only possibility.”
When they reached the main sleep pod chamber, Axel silently broke off from him and went one direction to her own pod while Marsden went the other. There were only a few marines that hadn’t sealed themselves in their pods yet. Marsden was completely unsurprised to find that Bayne was one of them. Bayne had the oversized pod next to Marsden’s. The pod were designed to be as cozy as possible around the marines while they were in dilation sleep, which meant that there had to be several different size pods to accommodate them all. Marsden’s was the average size, and Axel’s was among the smallest that the Recon Marines provided. Bayne’s was the biggest, and according to rumor had to be custom ordered, as none of the off-the-shelf models would fit his height and shoulder-width.
“Marsden,” Bayne said in his typical deep rumble of a voice. “Did she…”
“No,” Marsden said with a sigh.
“I didn’t even finish the question. How would you know what I was going to ask?”
“Because it’s the same damned question you always ask. No, Axel didn’t ask or say anything about you.”
“Nothing? Nothing at all?”
“Bayne, when are you going to give this up? Axel’s not into you.”
“You think she’s into someone else?” Bayne asked. For such a huge, intimidating man, he somehow managed to look very much like a scolded puppy.
“As far as I can tell, she’s not into anyone. I’ve never, ever seen her show any sort of romantic or sexual interest in anyone of any gender. I don’t even get why you’re so into her. There are plenty of women in the Recon Marines who would be more than happy to hook up with you.”
“I don’t want someone to hook up with. I want someone to connect with.”
“You have the body of a steel pillar,” Marsden said. He refrained from adding that Bayne also had the brains of one. “She has the body of a petite gymnast. She has the brain of a calculator. You, uh, don’t. What do you possibly think the two of you could connect over?”
“We both like explosions.”
Marsden had to shrug at that. They did indeed both like explosions. The difference was that for Bayne, it was an occasional diverting fling, while for Axel, it was a passionate love affair for the ages. There was a reason Axel was the explosive expert on the ship. Bayne was more of the heavy artillery type.
Once they had both finished their prep for the pods, Marsden got into his, pressed the button to close and seal it, then took a deep whiff of the fast-acting sleeping gas that flooded the chamber. He lost all consciousness for what felt like a mere five seconds for him, then a second gas pumped into the pod to wake him up. The pod opened and he carefully got out. Bayne did the same beside him, although the enormous man stumbled and almost fell.
“I hate that,” Bayne said. “Remind me again why we have to do that every single time the ship makes a jump?”
“Maybe because we don’t want to die or go insane?” Marsden asked.
“Right,” Bayne said. “There is that, I guess.”
Personally, Marsden had to wonder if Bayne’s abnormally sized sleep pod didn’t pump in enough gas each time, and it caused light brain damage on each jump, because he always asked that question every time. Marsden always gave the exact same answer, and Bayne always acted like he was hearing Marsden’s smartass remark for the first time.
The pods existed for two reasons. The first was to protect their bodies from the harsh and unusual forces working on the ship during a light jump. The second was to keep them from losing their minds from the jump’s weird time effects.
To everyone now leaving their pods
and starting to suit up for the mission, it felt like only a matter of seconds had passed since they’d gotten in their pods. The actual time that would have passed according to the Dixon’s ship-board computer would have been anywhere between ten and fifteen minutes. And yet, the time that would have passed outside the ship, according to the standard Earth calendar, would be anywhere from two to three weeks, depending on how far exactly they had traveled. The light-jump caused time dilation effects, thanks to Einstein’s Special Theory of Relativity. It was why Recon Marines were encouraged not to have too many friends and loved ones outside the service: to anyone back on the core planets, the people on these ships were barely aging, while to the people on the Dixon, everyone else aged slightly faster.
Marsden went to his equipment locker to get his gear. As he did, his PDM chirped right along with everyone else’s. Marsden didn’t bother to unclip his and look at it, as enough people around him were doing it that he could hear everything their incoming message said.
“Good day, marines,” a gruff voice said from multiple PDMs. If Marsden had actually been looking at his instead of inspecting his helmet and light armor, he knew he would see an extreme close-up of a mustachioed man’s face looking out at him through a static-filled blue screen. The Recon Marines tended to simply call the man Mister, although there was plenty of debate as to whether Mister existed at all or was just some computer program that sent them their orders for each mission.
“As you receive this message, the current time is”—Mister’s voice was completely replaced for a second by a different, more obviously computer-generated voice—“1647 Greenwich Mean Time, August 2nd, 2147 Earth calendar.”
Marsden paused in shrugging into his light armor, unsure that he had heard the date correctly. He almost thought it was just him, but the woman who had a locker next to his, Murakame, spoke up.
“Almost two months? Just how far exactly did we travel?”
It was a rhetorical question that no one bothered to answer. If they’d lost nearly two months instead of the standard two weeks, either something had gone wrong with the engines to make them go slower, or else they had travelled farther into the galaxy than any of them had ever been before. The first possibility was extremely unlikely, given how paranoid the Recon Marine techs were about making sure everything on the ship ran smoothly, so it was probably the second option.
A murmur passed through the marines as they registered this. A few sounded audibly nervous, while most of the others were excited. This was the kind of thing they’d signed up with the Recon Marines for, after all. If they’d wanted easy, safe jobs, they would have signed up for one of the core planet military branches or militias.
“You are all here because the Recon Marines have enacted the Elliot Contingency.”
Marsden whistled. Wow, this was a big one. It was a good thing he hadn’t bet Axel where they were going after all. He would have lost this one big time.
“What’s the Elliot Contingency?” Bayne asked, a little too loudly, from his own locker. While Mister’s speech had been pre-recorded before they’d even been sent out, Marsden smiled at the way Mister seemed to anticipate Bayne’s question.
“For those of you too lazy or illiterate to read your damned manuals,” Mister said. “The Elliot Contingency is for when first contact is anticipated with a potentially hostile alien race.”
“Wow, really?” a grunt named Nunez said from a few lockers down. “What does that put us at now?”
“If we confirm their presence,” Axel called out from somewhere, “this would be the sixth sentient and intelligent non-human species we have made contact with.” What she didn’t say was that only two of them, so far, had been anything close to friendly toward humans. Although it might not be the best politics, the Recon Marines pretty much assumed by this point that they needed to be ready for hostile.
Mister continued while everyone finished gearing up. “On Earth Calendar May 28th, an automated deep-galactic probe returned to the outpost on Charon with data on several planets possibly capable of supporting human life. Before that information could be passed on to the Colonization Council, an anomaly was detected on the surface of a rocky and arid planet with the current temporary designation of Bullfinch-2.
“Further study of the data revealed the anomaly to be some kind of non-naturally occurring object suggestive of a ship design, although it is one that doesn’t match any known design used by the known sentient species. Further data suggests energy patterns consistent with advanced weapon systems, although at this point that is mostly speculation. Command has determined that you marines are to use Pattern 37 in starting to approach the possible vessel, with pattern changes to be determined by M. Dollarhyde and R. Popkess at their discretion. Thus ends the briefing. Good luck, marines.” The message ceased, and the image of the man with the mustache disappeared from all their PDMs.
“Alright, everyone, you heard Mister!” Popkess called out from the far end of the lockers. “Everyone designated for planet-fall as part of Pattern 37 needs to be fully prepped and ready in five minutes. Welcome to Bullfinch-2!”
Dollarhyde finished the traditional starting speech of Recon Marine missions. “Why do we do this, everyone?”
Every single marine in the room answered in unison. “Because no one else will!”
“Damned right,” Popkess called out. “Now get your asses moving.”
August 2, 2147 (Earth Calendar)
1701 Greenwich Mean Time
Location: Franklin Dixon Dropship Alpha, Approaching Bullfinch-2
Marine Heartbeats Detected on Dropship: 46
Pattern 37 required that the marines aboard the Dixon split into three separate groups. The first and smallest consisted of eight marines that stayed on the main ship. These would be the last resort and included everyone absolutely necessary to get the Franklin Dixon back to the core worlds as well as a few support crew like medics in case anyone that came back to the ship needed medical attention that the field medics hadn’t been able to administer. The remaining marines split into two groups of twenty-three and huddled together in the main dropship as it fell to the surface of Bullfinch-2. Marsden was in Charlie group under Dollarhyde. He much preferred being under her command than having to deal with Popkess, who had a tendency to talk purely to hear his own voice. Bayne ended up in Delta group and desperately wanted to find someone in Charlie that would switch with him, although that wasn’t because he had a problem with Popkess. He simply wanted to be in the same group as Axel, who was sitting quietly on the Charlie side.
“This sucks, Marsden,” Bayne said. “Come on, be a friend for once.”
“First, stop using the ‘be a friend’ thing. It might be more believable if you ever let yourself have friends. Second, you know the starting team assignments are based on evenly balancing our knowledge and skills until the team leaders decide to switch it up for mission reasons. If Popkess and Dollarhyde know that you’re trying to switch, they’ll have your head.”
Bayne grunted. “I’m not afraid of Popkess.”
“But you are afraid of Dollarhyde.”
“Damn right I am. That woman is scary when she’s angry.”
That was apparently reason enough to get Bayne to be quiet about it for the rest of the trip down. After several minutes of flight, all of their PDMs chirped, and as one the marines pulled them out to look at the screens. While Dollarhyde wasn’t sitting so far away from Marsden that he couldn’t see or hear her, it was standard pre-mission procedure for the mission’s commanders to use the PDMs just to make sure that every single marine on the dropship clearly got everything she was saying.
“Okay, listen up,” Dollarhyde said. “The tac/tech strategists on this one are going to be Mingo on Charlie team and Arizona on Delta team. Arizona, do the honors and show us what you two have picked up so far.”
Dollarhyde’s image on the screen was replaced with a small inset of Arizona and a much larger scan of the planet’s surface. “Bullfinch-2 i
s currently getting classified as a Class C environment.” Marsden didn’t need her to explain that this meant it was capable of supporting human life, but hardly the kind of place anyone would want to stay for long. Most Class C planets didn’t even have their own native life. “Tox and microbe scans are currently showing negative, but as is standard procedure for a class C, continue to wear your mini re-breathers until we give the okay otherwise. Our destination is here.” A point lit up in a mountainous area on the screen, then zoomed in for a closer shot of the target. The ship in question was resting on a plateau, although the long gouge in the rock and trail of debris behind it implied that it hadn’t had the most majestic of landings. “Mingo, you’re the one who know more about alien design,” Arizona said. “Tell us what you’re seeing here.”
Mingo’s picture replaced Arizona’s. “The rounded, lengthy design of the ship is reminiscent of the warships used by the Stenani, but random bulbous regions up and down the side do not match anything we’ve seen for any other known race. It’s possible that we’re dealing with some offshoot of the Stenani, although we won’t be able to know for sure until we get inside.”
Llewellyn’s picture appeared briefly at the bottom of the screen as she asked a question. “That ship looks dead. Are we anticipating anything alive in there?”
Arizona’s picture appeared again. “We’re reading no life signs on board, although we’re picking up some kind of interference we’ve never seen before, so we’re going to make the assumption that there could still be something dangerous in there until we see otherwise. Given the amount of dust and weathering we’re seeing on the ship’s hull, we’re making the rough estimate that it has been here for about three years. Chances of survivors under those conditions are slim, but we can’t be sure without knowing anything of the capabilities of the species that made it.”
Dollarhyde came back on in Arizona’s place. “Dropship Alpha will land here,” she said as a red point appeared on the map roughly two hundred meters to the east of the ship. “Charlie team will proceed north around what we believe is the aft of the ship and then west to a breach we’ve detected in the hull. Delta team will go directly west to what we believe may be the main entrance.”
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