“Well?” asked the man once more.
Spartan looked at the man with the cool, harsh, and emotionless attitude he’d shown his torturers on the Biomech command ship. The room was more pleasant than expected, though as usual there were no windows and the walls were bare, other than for the four paintings showing different places on Earth.
“Spartan, as a former senior officer in the Marine Corps, I would expect a little common courtesy from a fellow Alliance operative.”
This made Spartan smile slightly. He wore no bindings or shackles, yet he had not been given free access to this facility. He had been given a basic set of fatigues baring the symbol of the Earthsec. They were nothing fancy but were at least clean, and a refreshing change following his shower and haircut that had made him look almost human again.
“Is this the legendary hospitality we can all expect from the armpit of the Alliance?”
That seemed to offend the man far more than he expected. It was a cheap, hollow victory, but Spartan was getting angry.
“I’ve traveled to more worlds than you have hairs on your head, boy. I’ve killed machines and Biomechs by their hundreds, but even they had the decency to fight me up front, and with weapons raised.”
He slammed his right fist onto the table.
“So why don’t you tell me what the hell is going on here? Contact Admiral Anderson for verification of who I am. Or just contact my company. Actually, do anything but sit there like a sad bitch with nothing better to do!”
The man lowered his gaze and said something Spartan couldn’t quite hear. It just made him even angrier.
“Are you in charge of this piss poor operation, or what?”
Spartan leaned back in his chair and laughed.
“No wonder we left Sol when we had the chance. This place always had the reputation as a backwater pit full of bureaucrats and dead worlds.”
Again the man didn’t respond so Spartan extended his battered left arm.
“What about this?” he growled.
The man looked surprised, but Spartan wasn’t sure which particular bit had shocked him the most. He looked over his shoulder at one of the walls before turning back to Spartan. He may have been trying to be discreet, but Spartan knew a two-way mirror when he saw one.
There must be officials out there.
“We have sent requests to Terra Nova. Luckily, due to your long military service, you have your biological details on file. I suspect the engineering teams will be able to fabricate you something…eventually.”
“Hmm,” murmured Spartan in irritation.
“We will know more when we can restore access to the Spacebridge back to Prime.”
Spartan remembered to his family, especially Teresa whom he hadn’t seen for so long now. He thought of her face, and her long black hair before his thoughts rushed back to the present situation.
“Perhaps we can approach this from a different direction,” asked the man.
Spartan nodded slowly, a half smile showing on his lip.
“Yeah, you do that.”
He had questions, but he’d be damned if he was going to give up whatever this obnoxious man wanted without getting something in return. Clearly he wanted information, yet there were no signs of drugs or inducement, so it couldn’t be too serious. At least he hoped that were true. He was becoming a little bored with the torture routine.
“Let’s take it in turns. I ask a question, you ask a question?” he suggested.
The man seemed positively enthralled at the idea and moved back to his chair and sat down.
“Very well, ask me.”
Spartan knew he had him, though he took little pleasure in it.
“Where am I?”
“You are in the Alliance Holding Center, on board the primary transit station.”
“For Earth?”
The man nodded in agreement.
“My turn,” he started, “How did you and Khan get here?”
We escaped from a Biomech ship, stole a Confederate bomber from before the War, and then came through a temporary Rift…to here.”
He gave the man the slyest of smiles that must have annoyed him terribly. The man seemed completely unfazed however.
“Why am I being held here?”
The man slid over his odd-looking datapad. The model had long been replaced by the secpad in most Alliance departments, and he could only assume that out here, on the outer edges of the Alliance, things were a little slower.
“What do you know about the Doomsday Comet?”
Spartan looked at the image and laughed.
“Is this the one the Helion prophecy is about?”
The man nodded.
“I know what everybody else does. It’s some bullcrap story about the return of the Biomechs.”
“Perhaps,” said the man, “Even so, this comet appeared unexpectedly and arrived in Helios, and has already resulted in casualties.”
He raised an eyebrow and tilted his head forward to gaze more closely at Spartan.
“Ever since it was spotted, a number of unusual events have occurred, including your arrival, as well as the wreckage that followed you.”
Spartan rubbed his chin as he listened.
“First the Rift here opened, then you arrived. Shortly after that, reports of individual unidentified ships were flagged across the Alliance.”
He smiled in a way that Spartan knew to be far from pleasant.
“Now, we may be the backwater of the Alliance, what do you expect after being abandoned by you Centauri centuries ago? Even so, we survived and run things out here as we want. This might technically be Alliance territory, but you will find no military units here. Sol maintains its own forces and command structure. So show a little respect, please.”
Spartan sensed there was more, but the man was holding back. He stared at him and spotted the shifting of his eyes. It was as though the man was trying to look important, perhaps even just delaying him while something else happened.
He’s afraid, of what, me?
“You think I am behind this?”
He lifted his left stump.
“A man with one arm and a broken body?”
He may be battered and broken in many ways, but he was still more muscular and better built than most. His broad chest was strong, and his arm and leg muscles bulged with potential. Even though the Biomechs had held him and Khan for a long time, neither had given up on their physical strength or fitness; on the off chance that one day they might be able to fight back. The man said nothing and asked another question.
“How were you captured by the Biomechs?”
Spartan’s blood started to rush, and he immediately recognized the old rage rising in him. He wanted to grab the man, bash his head down onto the table, and wring the information out of him. He had to restrain himself. He closed his eyes and breathed in, reminding himself that this was human air, not the filth he’d been forced to endure on that ship.
“I was on an Alliance sanctioned operation with my company, APS Corp. We’d boarded a T’Kari Raider when a Rift opened up. The ship escaped with us on board. It gets complicated after that.”
He rubbed his cheek with his left hand before remembering once more that it wasn’t there. He cursed the missing part of his limb, and then the machines that had done the work. Looking back at the man, he wondered quite what they expected to get from him.
“Alliance sanctioned mission on board an alien vessel? We have heard of these T’Kari back here, but none have been seen. Why exactly were you involved with these non-humans?”
Spartan was getting the distinct impression from the man that this entire sector was riddled with racist, possibly xenophobic citizens with an interest in maintaining their own particular brand of society.
“My company was conducting a special ops mission with the support of the T’Kari. I assume you understand they are our friends, allies even?”
The man grinned.
“A lot has changed since you left
us, Spartan. The T’Kari are part of this happy Alliance now, just like us. That doesn’t make them the same as me, or perhaps even you.”
He paused and considered his next question.
“Well, that doesn’t quite answer my question though, does it? I want to understand how it was that you vanished from human controlled space and then returned, many months later with Biomechs in tow and entered our space through an unchartered Spacebridge. A bridge, I might add, that conveniently closed up after your arrival.”
Spartan went to scratch his left hand as happened so often. The fact he couldn’t scratch was sometimes more annoying than having lost the hand to start with. Finally, he stood up and glared at the man.
“How long is this crap going to take? I have things to do, and that includes contacting my wife and family.”
The man stayed in his seat and beckoned for Spartan to return to his previous position.
“Please? This won’t take much longer, and then you will be free to go.”
I doubt that very much, but if there’s a way to speed this up, I’ll take it.
He sat down slowly, never taking his eyes from the man’s face.
“The rest is messy, but the important bit is that eventually we were taken by the machines, and they did this, among other things.”
He raised his shattered arm.
“That’s when you were tortured and questioned?”
Spartan nodded.
“Of course.”
He said no more; the memories of his imprisonment were as fresh as the first time the machines had questioned him. As he sat there, he recalled the cell where he and Khan plus the other silent prisoners were kept. He also remembered the machine that had removed his arm, and it filled him with rage.
“And how are you now? Are you managing without it?”
“Yes,” he said through clenched teeth.
“My family, where are they?”
The man tapped the datapad, and it changed to show the faces of Teresa and Jack. Spartan lifted the device closer with his right hand. There was little that could soften him, but the sight of his two closest family members could do just that. Both of the images showed them in uniform, and it took a moment before he noticed the insignia on Teresa’s tunic.
“Uh, are you sure about this? Teresa hasn’t worked in the Corps for some time. Neither have I.”
The man was about to speak when a knock came from outside. He stood up and walked to the door. It opened and in came two men in suits. One looked at Spartan while the other spoke in hushed tones to his interrogator. Finally, they left and the man returned to his seat.
“Everything okay?” he asked.
The man looked a little flushed but moved back to the previous line of enquiry.
“Your wife, Ms Teresa Morato was reassigned during our last recruitment drive. As you know, all military personnel, whether retired or discharged are eligible for duty.
“She joined up, why?”
“Your company, APS has gone. It was broken up, along with most of the PMC sector just after your disappearance. Your wife and son have, well, they have seen considerable action. Major Morato is now second-in-command of the 17th Marine Battalion, under the command of Colonel Gun, a friend of yours, I believe.”
A hundred thoughts raced about in his head. His wife had reached a level he never had, and his old friend now commanded what must be over a thousand marines. He had so many things to ask, but before he could open his mouth, the man returned to his own line of questioning.
“You came back with a group of T’Kari, as well as this Khan. How do they fit in with your narrative? With contact to Terra Nova and Prime lost, we are temporarily unable to verify any of your claims or the identity of the…non-humans you returned with.”
Those last words shook him, more so when he realized that this man was referring just as much to Khan as he was to the group of T’Kari. With all that had gone on, he hadn’t given the loss of contact any great thought.
“Wait, you have lost contact? Did you manage to reach my wife?”
The man nodded.
“Of course, we sent a full report to High Command within an hour of your vessel’s capture. Once the technical issues with the Rift have been dealt with, you will be able to speak with her.”
Spartan wanted to know more about both his wife and Jack, but the news of the Rift sat heavy with him.
“Tell me about the Rift, what happened?”
The man looked confused.
“I don’t understand. We lost communications access to the Mars transfer station that controls the Rift. An engineering team will be there within the hour to re-establish contact, why?”
Spartan stood up and shook his head angrily.
“Because if you fools understood anything, you would know that all transfer stations have triple layer communications protocols with override protection. The only way to lose contact with the station itself is because they do not want to answer.”
“Or?”
Spartan was already at the door when he turned back to the man.
“Or they are unwilling to answer. You already said that this prophecy is about the end of the world, or whatever it is, has been identified with this comet. What if isolating the Rifts is the first phase?”
The man looked even more confused, not that it seemed possible.
“First phase of what?”
“An attack, by the Biomechs, of course.”
Spartan ripped open the door, and one of the men in a black suit stumbled in where he had been leaning on the panel.
“Stop him!” called out the man from inside the room.
The second man in his charcoal grey suit reached for Spartan, only to find himself face down on the ground with Spartan’s knee placed in the middle of his back. A loud emergency klaxon started to wail; yet none of the three could have triggered it. Spartan released the pressure and stood up straight. The two men approached at wary distance but waited for their comrade inside to emerge and stand next to Spartan.
“I didn’t trigger the alert. Something is happening.”
Spartan laughed at them all.
“You are fools, all of you.”
The corridor running from outside the room was wide and lit from a double pair of strip lights that ran the full length of the shaft. The floor ran up at a very slight incline. It was an easy giveaway that the station used the primitive system of artificial gravity based on rotating sections. The klaxon finally stopped, to be replaced by the drone of one of the station’s officials.
“Alert…alert, we have intruders aboard. All personnel are to move to secure quarters until this facility is returned to Alliance control.”
“How do we look outside?” Spartan asked.
The three men said nothing at first, but when Spartan moved closer, the shortest one spoke up.
“At the end of the passageway is the recreation area. There is an observation deck off to one side providing views of Earth.”
“And Khan? Where is he?”
The man that had been questioning him in the room shook his head.
“No, he and the others non-humans are being held securely…it is for their own…”
He didn’t see the punch coming, and it connected harder than even Spartan expected. The man’s nose seemed to explode in a flash of blood, and then he was on his back on the ground. Spartan turned to face the other two men but neither came at him, both seemed especially concerned to avoid him as he waited in an odd looking fighting stance. Most people would adopt a classic boxing position, but not him. Instead, his arms were low down, and his body weight shifted onto his back leg.
“I won’t ask you again!” he said.
The men looked at each other and then pointed at the third door down on the left. Spartan moved off immediately while the two men helped their bloody friend to his feet. Spartan was at the door in seconds and slammed the palm of his hand on the release button. The door hissed open, and he moved inside. It was exactly the same
as the room he’d been in, except that Khan lay prone on a bed; his limbs bound firmly to its surface. A man sat in the corner looking at a datapad. Spartan’s rage continued to rise, and he stormed toward Khan who spotted his friend from his half open left eye.
“Spartan! What’s happening?”
The klaxon had lowered in volume but continued bleating in the background. The seated man was now on his feet and had whipped out a stun baton from a thigh holster. It seemed to amuse Khan greatly, and a low-pitched chortle came from his mouth.
“That’s a big mistake, my friend.”
He swung for Spartan in a way that suggested he expected no attempt to struggle from his haggard new arrival. Spartan avoided the attack without even moving his feet, and just a beautifully orchestrated tilt of his body. As the man overbalanced, Spartan brought his stump of a left arm down on the square of the man’s back. He went down hard to the ground, in time for the men in suits to enter.
“Spartan, stop this madness,” said the one with the bloodied nose.
Spartan had the restraints off Khan in seconds before he gave them even a glance. When he did, the fire in his eyes surprised even Khan. He pointed at his friend.
“Khan is a hero of the Alliance, one of the many Jötnar that has bled for us in war and combat. Now you treat him like a common animal, like some kind of…”
“Biomech,” said the injured man.
Spartan took a step closer, but Khan grabbed his arm. Spartan looked up at him and lowered his head slightly. Khan then moved to the man and turned his head slightly, looking at the man’s face intently with a bloodshot left eye.
“What are your defenses and who is attacking this station?”
The man seemed surprised at the question.
“Answer me, you fool!” he roared.
The man was unable to respond, either from fear or from an inability to absorb what was happening, both in the room, and on the rest of the station. Khan looked to Spartan and snorted in derision at the men.
Star Crusades Nexus: The Second Trilogy Page 34