halo.bungie.org

They're Random, Baby!

Fan Fiction

Taking Tritus by Dispraiser



Taking Tritus Part One
Date: 15 December 2002, 8:05 pm

      The static hissed as three angered men hit the top of the TV unit in a futile attempt to make it work properly.

      “GAH!!! Bloody TV! It’s never done this before!” Shouted a European man from the couch. He was showing his European heritage quite noticeably because of his strong accent.

      “Well, who knows what this could mean, I’ll go check the wires.” Said a rather chunky man who’s plaid shirt was coated in small patched of oil from repairing the submarines.

      “Yeah, you go and do that man. Just make sure to get it working! The game’s almost over!” The European man replied angered before resuming hitting the TV. As the other man, who appeared to be a mechanic left the room through the reinforced door to prevent flooding the base if one of the walls were to give way to the pressure outside.

      A radar operator rushed in, placing a hand on the doorframe and yelling in, “Come on guys, to the battlestations we have an inbound tango, two hundred meters across!”

      “Did you warn the LFC?”

      “No, we couldn’t warn the Lunar 4 Counsel, all communications with the surface have been cut off.”

      “Well that explains the TV.”


      “Second green berets!” The radio shouted over the storm of the great spot. The storm was always there, and it severely hampered by the Great spot, which was a continual storm over the ocean. Our Pelican rumbled almost as if to match the clouds and storms however what it did was of no use, the storms deafening roar was too great for it to compete. The Pelican however swerved around as the storms intense winds kept our dropship bouncing though the air. “Report in, what is your status? Do you have a visual of the target?”

      “Negative sir, all we can see is the storm. Nothing is there at all, we’re going to attempt to land on the supply shaft!” I shouted back to the radio. The rain was pelting the outside of the pelican and it roared at a power comparable to the Pelican.

      “Rodger, when you spot the shaft make sure to report in with a status check up.” The mission operator replied, clearly disappointed that

      “Command acknowledged” the Commander replied. Throughout the night he had done much of the talking between us and the base despite that he was furthest from the radio and a naturally silent type after seeing years of front line action. He had a long history of success in most militral campaigns, which may be the reason why he was picked, because he was one of the best warriors that the Marine Corps had, once being the one man who meant the difference between victory and failure in the operation. Rumor has it that he was once a happy person, but now he is a depressed insomniac. Can’t say the same wouldn’t have happened to me under those circumstances. The pilot, who had a green glow coming from the cabin as a result of the night vision that he was using, began to speak to us, he too a little quiet, “Alright men, we’re moving into position for a decent upon the surface supply structure.” I slipped the dark green poncho out of my pack and slid it over me. In addition I grabbed some rubber boots and switched out my standard GI boots and slid them onto my feet. I put on a brimmed hat and prepared to get out of the ship. As the Pelican descended we all shared a long silence, and occasional glances at one another. There was eight of us. Myself I was Lieutenant Mitchell, my first name Caleb. I stood as a short man, and my eyes were a burning red color that seemed descendent of some light brown color. My pale skin was a result of my training in a sense, my job was to be unnoticeable, and to be a demolitions expert though I am, like all other Green Beret, well trained in hand to hand as well as short to medium range combat. I lifted the rifle and set it back in my hand, repeating the process for a few minutes. This was my lucky rifle, and its age was at least five years. The model was retired from service itself, but only because the assault rifle had been upgraded recently though I was satisfied with my current one. It had a rubber grip at the end though it was beginning to fall off from extensive usage and a short body. Resembling a hybrid between the sub machine guns and the assault rifles of current times, the gun had a shorter body than assault rifles however it had a high rate of fire and large clip with larger bullets, all characteristics of the assault rifle class weapons. The collapsible stock on the back was broken and was incapable of collapsing because of some damage that it had suffered. I had a large suppressor on the end of the rifle. Though it was said to decrease accuracy, so was firing in an automatic setting which is almost a paradox being that a gun is meant to be fired. The suppressor however was an ideal tool because if anything it helped you by not alerting your enemies though most battles now are fought in massive operations where stealth is discounted. We landed in an abrupt rumble and the back door of the cabin opened up. I stood up and stepped out onto the landing pad. The glowing lights alternated between each other, blinking lights towards the center of the landing pad where the Pelican had landed near to. The rain poured down on us though I was able to seek shelter beneath the tail of the plane long enough to grab some of our supplies and run for the door. The torrential rain continued as I ran for the door, covering my face with a bent arm though the good it did was sub-par. Stepping up to the door I set down the box and held out a wet hand to the security access panel.

      A female voice come on, “Access verified. Enjoy your stay on the Tritus Lab Mr. Mitchell.”

      “You have a name?” I asked assuming that the voice originated from an AI construct.

      “Yes, call me Tracy.” A Tracy was a low level AI that I had heard of before. It was used only in areas that the owners of the area were too lazy to hire a real person to complete the task. The Tracy here might have been used to regulate the temperature of the rooms and to make sure that oxygen levels get balanced. But at least she was there though emotionless and incapable of the very tasks that AI is supposed to describe. I wondered however why this facility was so critical. It had an older AI and was according to our briefing only a research facility. The nerds here could have probably fixed the communications network themselves.

      “Well then Tracy, open the doors and call up the elevator.” The door hissed open revealing a dry well lit interior, which I was soon gratefully standing inside. I rested the top of the gun on my shoulder and felt for my sidearm with my free hand. It was almost a reflex from my field action to make all last minute checks before the Pelican leaves. Finding my weapons and satisfying my search I grabbed our field communication box, which we were to use to reestablish communication. We stepped into the next room as the door to the outdoor landing pad closed behind the Commander. He had a grim look on his face, though it was becoming increasingly normal to see faces like his among the Marines after fighting for so long. We were all soaked despite the coverings that we had. I pulled the poncho off and laid it down on the ground. As it hit the ground it made a clapping noise, a result of the water on the thick raincoat. I took off the brimmed hat, and following the movements of the Commander wrung it out and stuck it in the bottom of the packs that we had. I left the rubber boots one. The commander took a mine and began to set it up though in the interior of the base it was not camouflaged at all. He began to set the mine so that if anything hit it or caused simple seismic waves near it the bomb would detonate. “You know that they will see that, don’t you?”

      “It doesn’t matter. They can’t avoid it.” He said confidently. The commander, despite his own heartlessness was a great man, and always inspired whatever squad he had. He was an amazing person. Stepping into the airlock we hopped aboard the elevator and went down to the bottom floor, which took us fifteen minutes. I noted as we went down the elevator that it had a bar of lights every ten feet. The last one read 5300 feet. This station was one of the first research stations on Lunar 4. Lunar 4 was an area where lots of scientific operations were fulfilled because it was known to have many races of sentient life. Most we were able to coincide with though some of the animals we brought threw off the ecosystem. The sentient life however was nothing more than a fish or abstract bird at the most though all were reptilian. Aside from the life on Lunar 4, it was a rare planet that humans could survive one that was trapped in a two star solar system, a binary star system. One of the moons was also a very large breed. It had a thin atmosphere, and it flew very near to the top of the atmosphere leaving a trail of eclipses on a weekly basis. Perhaps the greatest anomaly of Lunar 4 is what the moons large gravitational field does to the water. Earth has tides as a result of its moons gravity, while lunar 4 has upside-down rainstorms of a sort. The gravity on Lunar 4 being about .6Gs the moon is able to lift water off of the surface of the planet and carry it in liquid form for a while before letting it go as the rotation continues. This rare event was named the torrentian, and was a spectacle enjoyed almost constantly. It also had a set of rings and a great spot, which had been storming over one side of the planet for so long that it eroded away an entire continent that was once located beneath it. Beneath the clouds of course, was an ocean, and below it was a hotbed for science, trying to figure out what could spawn a torrential rainstorm such as this. Lunar 4 had two moons as well though the two are scheduled to crash into one another in a half century. There was speculation that a missile attack on one of them could blast it out of orbit to obtain escape velocity while it hit the right time in its orbit, however few were willing to make that sacrifice because there was a high chance of errors causing the whole planets destruction. We walked down the hallway silently with a confident stride, none of us breaking the silence allowing only the noise of our footsteps to fill the hallway with noise. Our footsteps echoed down the hallway which was a metallic grey, as most of the hallways were once we got past the airlock of the upper floors. Below us was the floor, which was a metal grate, beneath it pipes ran along it marked with a variety of colors and symbols. The wall was randomly scarred with markings to signify where we were going. The facility, which was positioned over two acres of the underwater seabed was occupied by only twenty to thirty scientists at any time in the year, and therefore most of it was occupied with the various machines that kept the station powered and operational. The whir of the engines however was only a minor nuisance being that they were very well silenced by the insulators around it. At the center of the facility, a little below the actual labs, the scientists had a block living quarters. Following standard mission operations for an operation to reestablish communication we marched first to the security control room to attempt to recover the scientist. With the security cameras we could find them much quicker. Had we had an actual AI in this base rather than a Tracy model we would have been able to ask it to find life forms, however the Tracy was of near to no use. We entered the security center as the technical expert of our division sat down at the computer, waving his fingers before beginning to rhythmically smash in the keyboard buttons. We watched the monitor as a series of menus opened at unbelievable speed until he drew back his hand hitting the return key with unprecedented speed and intensity. Kicking his feet up, a satisfied look on his face he reclined the chair as the screen flashed onto a security camera shot of the cargo hold. Looking at the picture we tried to identify if anything was wrong. Nothing was out of the ordinary, just an ordinary hallway with no one within it. The next room was carefully analyzed finding the same results. Again, the next room was empty, as were all the rest. Theo only question was, where was everyone?

      A rifleman leaned a little closer and stared at the screen searching for errors. Finding none he asked a few questions, “Anyone think that maybe they all left on a mission?” a mutual nod of disconfirmation awaited him from the other seven Marines. Tracy then replied, “No, all shuttles are currently docked in the main facility. Airlock activity has been unusually low. All communications have either been jammed or have been destroyed somehow. Most systems are…” she continued on with a list of all the malfunctioning systems while we ignored her continual speech. Had she been a full AI construct she would have understood our disrespect, however she had no emotions.

      “Well, lets go probe the surrounding area. If we find even one body, we’ll come back. You, Carson, you stay here.” The technical expert raised his hand to salute the Commander. “You six, come with me, I’ll take point. Let’s lock and load men, who knows whats out there.” I grabbed my rifle and lowered the rubber side into my left hand. Bracing the but against my upper arm. I held the gun in front of me, my eyes looking over the top of the rifle covering our flank. We filed into a column and paced with a smooth commando style stride heading for the research labs. We stepped into the resting room. It was a cramped little room with a reinforced door and it had a TV, blaring static. The room was otherwise empty.

      “Alright, we’re moving into the wreck room. Watch our backs for us.” The commander whispered into our whisper mikes.

      “Copy, tell me when you step in, I’m switching cameras now.” The technician replied.

      “Um, we are already in the room. Don’t you see us?”

      “No, all visuals remain the same, no difference in the image at all. Go stand by the TV.”

      “Right, moving in.” The commander stepped over to the TV and stood waving his arms at the camera.

      “Still nothing. Something must be wrong. Maybe a technical glitch.” Said Carson.

      I looked up at the camera. One of the wires was cut out of the bundle. I gestured up at it, “Hey, the camera is clipped.”

      The commander walked over and looked up at it squinting, “You’re right…” he said slowly as he tried to figure out what wire it was. “It looks like it’s the main video one.” He said, looking away from it. Moving the mike a little closer to his mouth he said, “Carson, we’re calling the mission off, we didn’t find anything other than that the video is clipped. We didn’t know what you’re seeing but…” There was a short pause, “Carson?” No reply. The commander said a little more panicked, “Carson! What’s going on?” Again there was a pause just as before. “Come on team, we have to get to Carson and find out what’s wrong.” He ran out the door signaling for us to follow. We paced double time down the hallway to the communications room where the surveillance set up was located. Carson’s body was lying limp on the keyboard hitting the “G” button. His neck was snapped. Three prints on the sides of his neck were found, two on one side and one on the other, a forefinger and thumb. Hopefully…


      “Alright, so we have determined this. He is dead.” A group nod replied to my rhetorical question. “He had a snapped neck.” Another nod came from the remaining six others. “And we have no idea what could do this.” Another nod of confirmation replied to my question. I lowered my head as the Medical Specialist busily worked examining the body of the dead Marine. He was lying out on a cold metal table in the medical bay. He ran a series of X-rays, though none told too much more. “And one more thing, how much force was applied?”

      “Well, more than any human could supply.” The medic replied only half attentive to me though I am sure that he was telling me the correct answer to my question.

      “So are you saying that the Covenant are down here?” I asked knowing that an Elite was strong enough to damage a human so.

      “Lets just say that I’d like to see the Elite that could do this.” The medic replied though now he was taking the role of a coroner. “Well, there’s only one way to fid out what did it.”

      “YEAH!!! Let’s go get it!” said a linebacker type man who had a large assault weapon. My briefing was strictly limited to technical failure being our main nemesis. The linebacker type man was Private Hagen, and from what I was able to gather through my limited knowledge of most of the crew, he was a loud, overzealous type that was unordinary noisy relative to the rest of us. He must have had a very hardy personality to not be effected by the intense terror of combat.

      “Not yet, let’s figure out that anomaly in the computer system. I would have asked him,” the commander gestured to the dead Marine, “but as you can see I won’t be expecting an answer back. So, anyone have any idea as to why the Tracy unit can’t figure out why Tracy is useless now? All she does is tell us the obvious, why can’t she tell us what the problem is?” He looked at each of us quickly checking to make sure that we were all as baffled as he was by this situation. Satisfied with his search, which maintained that he was still up to date with the rest of the squad, it left him with a small boost of confidence. However, it also meant that we were all sub-par and stranded in an unfriendly environment.

      “I am not reporting any problems because there are none.” The Tracy stated.

      “See what I mean!” the commander yelled, agitated by the incompetence of the Tracy unit.

      “Yeah, I see. I think that we should call off this mission. We need to know at least what we’re up against; can you get the Pelican in here to pick us up?” I said.

      “I don’t know. I’ll call them in. Unpack the communications kit.” The commander said, inserting his personality’s natural commanding tone into the last sentence.

      “Sir!” I said in acknowledgment with an acute noise and I began to unpack the high power radio that I had. Finishing I handed the headset to the Commander.

      “This is the Tritus insertion team, anyone there Delta team?”

      A static filled reply came over the radio unit, “Yeah, we have your signal, it’s a little weak.”

      “Well, yeah, we are projecting it through a mile of water.”

      “Storm activity spiked recently too.” The pilot replied, “There’s some odd disturbance in the north quarter of the storm, its throwing everything off.”

      “Ah, well something unexplainable is going on here too. One of our crewmen turned up dead and we are seeing some security anomalies. No bodies so far. We have no idea what killed him though, he has a fractured spinal cord at the neck, he died instantly.” The commander said. He went into a little bit of excessive detail in his answer though.

      “Sorry commander, but the storm is only getting worse, could you hold your position for another day or two, we don’t have a window to get in, the storm is too intense for us to fly though.”

      “Could you send in an ODST to back us up?” the commander asked, almost pleading with the pilot.

      “No, sorry, all ODST teams are having their station refitted for polar drops, they are out of service currently. Good luck men.” The pilot replied.

      “Just great… Well, listen, if you get an opportunity, come and pick us up.”

      “Rodger that, Pelican insertion craft out.” The radio resumed its static as we all sat for a minute, pondering what to do.

      “Any ideas?” the commander said, sounding more aggressive than before. Everything was going against his will.

      “Well, we could hide from whatever is loose down here, or we could kill it.” Said another demolitions expert, who was named Lieutenant Markson I believe. He had a very silent personality and this was the first thing that I had heard him say the entire mission.

      “Whatever? Nope. We aren’t running from it. They knew about this, I’m sure of it. That’s why they sent us in, they figured that we could take it down, and are we about to let down the LFC?” the Commander said.

      A general shout of agreement came from the group of us. The commander was great at striking up courage among us in times of need. “So where do we start, do you wanna limit its water supply by taking over the cafeteria and break up into shifts?” said another Green Beret, Sergeant Mark O’Conner, who seemed to be more of an intelligent Green Beret. “We can set up a small camp there. From what I have seen there is only one door into the room, and we could easily set up a security perimeter. It would be easy to defend one door after all.”

      “Good idea. Alright men, unless you have any better ideas lets pack up and move” The commander said.

      “I have an idea, lets go get our deceased friends gun.” I said, shocked at the cold heartedness of the statement. “And then decide what to do with the body.”

      “Yeah, we might need the ammo.” Said Hagan. We packed up our materials and left for the control room. Stepping in we looked for the gun.

      “Well, about that whole finding his gun thing. Where is it? Did we already take it?” I said. We hadn’t found the gun anywhere. It was as if we had already picked it up, or as if something had taken it. Sliding the helmet around to relieve an itch on my head I awaited my answer. The commander looked under the desk, and finally content that we had searched everywhere looked up.

      “Someone here have it or something?” he asked.

      A general series of nods and grunts meaning no signified that the gun was gone, for good. No one knew where it was, though we all expected that it had it. How do you make something that can snap a human neck at its faintest whim deadlier? Give it a rifle. Now not only did we have a hyper deadly mystery creature on our hands, but it’s armed. “Wanna get to the cafeteria. Quickly?” Said Private Hagan. A series of anxious nods and many approving nods answered his question.


      I woke up to someone jabbing at the side of my arm. “Caleb, it’s your shift. Get up. You and the commander are on duty.” I slowly began to see my vision clear as I awoke. I hadn’t slept very comfortably; I was sitting in a chair leaning forwards on a table. I wiped some spit from the side of my mouth and moved to the defensive bunker like set up that we had; some tables flipped on their sides lined with our materials. A gun nest of sorts was set up by the side of the door that was nothing more than another flipped over table and a few guns within it. The commander was also being alerted as to the shift change though it looked as if he didn’t get any sleep at all. I stood up, wiping the grogginess from my eyes and walked over to the gun nest sliding on my helmet and sitting down behind the gun nest. I leaned back on the chair and kicked my feet up onto the barricade as the commander began to stand up. He yawned for a few seconds then lowering his arms grabbed his rifle. Realizing that I had forgotten my rifle in my grogginess I walked over to the gun rack that we had, actually an oven, and slid mine out of the top row, observing the room. It was a square room about 40 feet across at any given point. However there was also a kitchen area in the furthest corner with a band of equipment and stove type machines that extended almost all the way across the room, leaving only small portions of room to move through on either end. My trust rifle in hand I headed back for the door’s gun nest and sat back down in the chair, relaxing as the horrible screeching noise of a chair moving towards me got closer and closer. The Commander, moving towards the gun nest, dragged a chair behind him with one hand and the other held his gun, a rifle similar to mine but with a much better scope and suppressor. It was also in much better condition, as the stock was completely collapsed, something that my gun couldn’t do and it also had a larger magazine, as I could tell by the extended handle. Sitting down he kicked his feet up on the barricade to match me. He was also great at becoming a Marines best friend because unlike most other commanders, he had not yet developed a superiority complex and general hatred towards most of his subordinates. He extended a fist towards me and I did the same, both of us hitting each others fists as a symbol of friendship. I folded my arms after setting down my rifle. He still held his though. He was acting pretty suspicious recently, as if he knew something. “So, enjoyed your stay on Tritus?” he said, knowing that my answer would not be any reports of anything fun having happened.

      “No, it’s been hell sir. I hate it here, I don’t know why anyone wants to come here.” I said with no tone to my voice, still staring strait forward almost as if paying no attention to the commander.

      “Well, don’t worry, it can only get better from here on…” the power flickered and then shut down. We looked up in the dark and watched the lights to see if they would flicker back on. With no results we turned on the flashlights of our guns and ran over to a few of the other men, waking them and activating some of the flares that we had. The Tracy however was still functional, complaining in its computerized voice about how we only had a few hours of oxygen left with the power down and that repairs to the engine room were imperative or we would freeze. I was paying no attention to it as I walked over to the next person, the large man, who was a linebacker looking type with broad shoulders and plenty of muscles coating him that were noticeable even through his many layers of Kevlar. I shook his shoulder.

      Shaking his shoulder again I said “Get up!” I shook his shoulder again, and seeing no response I reached up to his face to slap it quickly to wake him up. When I hit his face, his head flopped as if hardly connected at all off to the side. He was dead. His rifle was gone.


      “So we have another down, and his rifle missing. The same MO as the last, it must have been the same creature. It must have snuck in during the thirty or so second that the power was out, killed him and got out silently! Anyone know what the hell did this!” the commander said, he was acting to be angry, however, he was not doing a very good job at it. His naturally kind personality was showing through. We were in the cafeteria still, and we still had our flashlights on. It was pitch black otherwise and none of the usual humming was in the background. From my limited understanding of the situation, we were down here with no power, no escape, and limited time for survival, be it because of the cold, the suffocation. Or it.

      “Why don’t you tell us sir?” I said defiantly, hoping that my theory that he knew something, which was basically unfounded was correct.

      “What exactly do you mean by that Caleb,” a first name basis, I hope that’s a good sign, “Are you saying that I did this?”, going fine so far, not so harsh of a reaction as I had expected, “Lieutenant.” And so the first name basis leaves, that wasn’t a good sign.

      “No, I’m saying you’re in on it!” I said, hoping that if he did know something an angry tone would force him to speak.

      “In on what?” he replied, a sincerely angry tone with his voice, “Lieutenant.” Maybe I was wrong about the whole ‘superiority complex’ being missing after all.

      “In on this, it must be some conspiracy or something, I mean what, do sea monsters just appear on sea labs with enough knowledge to steal a firearm and know how to snap a mans neck? No, and it wasn’t human or covenant, we’ve already been able to loosely figure it. So what is it? You’ve been acting pretty strange recently you know. Staying up all night guarding the door, and you seem to know a little more than anyone here does.” I said.

      Angrily he replied with a lower tone of voice, “If I knew that some hyper deadly creature was down here, and that I would be stuck with it. Do you think that I would come here?” He had a good point.

      “Alright, I’ll shut up, but on one condition, you vow that you are telling the truth.” I don’t know what I expected. Was he going to say that he wasn’t telling the truth after he had so obviously denied having any knowledge of such a thing? Nope, I really just used this as a way to lighten the social impact that this would have on me. I was probably now the outsider of the whole group.

      “Ah, looks like someone here is sleep deprived. I just finished saying that I don’t know anything dumbass!” the commander replied, his statement starting slow and accelerating as it went on. “Now you listen to me lieutenant, if you want to make it out of here alive, you need to make sure that we all watch out for each other, and I somehow doubt that’s what you just did.”

      “Sorry sir. Looks like my hunch was wrong.” I still thought I was right though.

      “It’s okay Lieutenant.” I’m pretty sure that he added on the Lieutenant just to show me that he was mad.

      “Ah, great, but we need to get the power back up. It’s getting cold in here, and it’s a little scary. With that thing and all, you know?” I said waving my arms a little.

      “Yeah, first priority is the power, because otherwise it won’t matter if we kill that monster it won’t matter if we are all dying anyway. Lets head to the reactors. Use night vision, we want to hide as much as possible. Oh, and two of you get on heat vision, the things tracks will stick out in this cold if it comes near us or ahead of us. That is if it’s warm blooded.” Following orders I reached up to the part of my helmet directly above my forehead and flipped down a headset in front of my eyes. A slight high pitch noise temporarily chirped as the green screen within the night vision goggles activated. The rest were following suit, as I could see with my increased visual abilities. I flipped off my flashlight on the rifle and instantly saw visual ability increase. We formed a lose pentagon shape with the extra unit taking the rear and progressed through the hallway nervously, careful to check everywhere for the creature. We finally got to the reactor room, and found that only a manual disabling of the reactor was used. If this beast was truly filled with intentions of killing us it would have destroyed them, it was playing a game. The commander sat typing into the computers, which he had used a battery kit to operate. He was trying to fix the power systems, and seemed to be doing fine, tough his language was unusually vulgar. I walked up behind him apologetically.

      “Commander, sorry about before. It was out of line. I think that I was just taking out some free floating anger on you, sorry.”

      “It’s okay Caleb, “and so the first name basis returns. YEAH!!! “I understand. I have to admit, I don’t like it down here any more than you do. It’s okay. Really.”

      “Well as long as it’s all fine, I want to ask you something. Is that ok?”

      He sighed. “Yeah, fine. But listen, I’m not in on this. All I know are rumors and myths about this place.”

      “Rumors? What kind of rumors?”

      “All sorts. Things like that this is a facility for testing new super weapons, and that they have some cloning experiments going on down here, you had the internet mindcast, right Caleb?” the first name basis again, looks like he wasn’t too mad.

      “Yeah, I had the mindcast.” I replied.

      “Oh, well a year or two ago, when this facility was made public the rumor mill was churning. It was all over the mindcasts. I’m amazed that you didn’t see anything on it. Ah well, anyway, there was a half dozen or so major rumors, the largest of course that this wasn’t real, and I believed it.” He waved his hands around pointing at random things, “I think that it’s real now. But anyway, I have no idea which one to trust now, but I think that it might be a super weapon launch facility. Some terrorists must have struck here, really good ones. Once I found out that this place was real, and that something was wrong I signed up. I mean, it’s not just every day that you get to go inside the government’s most secretive publicly announced facility. You know that I picked this team myself, right? I figured that you guys wouldn’t tell anyone about what you find down here. If someone asks you, those two dies in a friendly fire accident or some other accident. Give few details, but when you do, give lots. I know that it’s immoral to lie, but over the last 20 or so years the UNSC has had to cut a lot of corners and tell a lot of lies, so don’t worry about it. It’s for the better good, so god will forgive you.”

      “Sounds like that was more of a speech than an answer Commander, nice work. Oh, and I did hear those rumors now that I think about it. I think that I followed that it was a geothermal power plant, like the government had said. I was always that kind of guy, you know, trusting.” I said.

      “Yeah, real trusting. You don’t even trust your commander. Don’t you remember back on Reach? You and me, we were at the top of the academy. We got turned down for that Spartan program, both of us. Well, we were both selected, but later they booted us, before we even got there. I wonder how that’s faring now.” He said. I think I remember that. “We were practical brothers after all those competitions between us and the others. I don’t know why we were kicked out of the program, but I think I’m glad about it. Probably went under anyway, and being in the Green Beret is much more prestigious.” He was obviously hoping to see me agree that the Spartan program was some cheap thing, not as good as the Green Beret. I hardly remembered it myself.

      “Ah, I’m sure that they ended up in the intelligence field or some ancient archeology. Sucks to be them. But anyway, thanks for forgiving me, you’d better get back to work before your battery runs dead.” I walked away. No response was expected. You see, the Commander and me had a strange relationship. We rarely ever talk, however we both consider each other friends that we trust in even the deadliest of all situations. I walked off and grabbed the radio, attempting to restore communication with the surface. I carefully unpacked the pieces of it and grabbed the communication headset. “Control, we have another man down, things aren’t going good down here! We need extraction asap, anyone within range?”

      “Negative Berets, you will have to hold out on your own, the storm activity it swelling up in the north quarters still, something it throwing off the wind.”

      “Well the damn power at the station is out! We’re running on night vision here, is there any way that you could get anything in, please!” I pleaded.

      “Sorry, but I can’t get in, it’s like a tornado with one bad ass attitude. A stream of water is actually touching the Narcos moon. It’s really freaking out up here on the surface. Any leads on the scientists?”

      I continued my plead ignoring his question, “Delta, is there any way that you could get in here? Remember before we were in the academy?” I can’t believe that I’m playing this card. “Remember? Your promise?”

      “Aw damn you! I was hoping that you forgot years ago!”

      “Do you remember what you said?” I asked just for the sake of making him feel obligated to come help me.

      “Yeah, I remember. But that was back in the days when we were paid to kill people, when we were in the Yakuza! You can’t hold my word for that!”

      Before I was a Marine, I held a much less honorable job. I was a Yakuza hit man despite my total lack of Japanese heritage. “So promises have a statute of limitations now, what did you say?”

      “Ah, I said that I would always make sure that you made it out of your missions alive, but those types of things are almost rhetorical man, you know that! It’s like saying good luck or something like that!”

      “Listen, I owe my life to you. Remember that one time. I had hit my mark. A swift shot to the head, but the cops were closing in on my position with a full SWAT squad. They almost made it up the elevator, and you had a clean slate up till then. You killed two men for me that day and got me out by the skin of my teeth. You saved my life, and we all need an encore here now. Some of us will die today, and no one wants that, so here’s the deal. You’re gonna get us now, or you never will. If we don’t contact you for twenty four hours consider us dead.” Striking up sympathy was something that I was good at despite that my moral fiber was unusually low.

      A long pause ensued. “Alright. I’ll be ready in six hours. Be on the landing pad within thirty minutes of that time or I’m dustin’ off without you. By the way, Caleb, how many times do you plan on playing this guilt trump card?”

      “As many as it takes. Thanks man, I owe you one.”

      “About twenty by now…” his voice snapped off along with the red indicator light on the front of the radio. I stood up and slid the pieces carefully into the box.

      “Hey guys, I got us a ride, we have six hours to get out of here, got an ETA on the power fixing up?”

      “Yeah, thirty minutes. Just keep me covered. Set up some more flares going and get rid of the night vision. I think I heard something.” Said the commander calmly despite that he probably had plenty of fear within his spirit now.

      I reached up to flip us the night vision goggle as a sudden grunt appeared to my left. I spun around and looked over. A short person, not a grunt, no covenant actually was before one of the men and had an arm drawn backwards, the other just an inch or so from the mans upper leg cage. He collapsed, clutching his chest. Private Hagan, who was also standing in awe fired a few rounds at it, and from what I saw every one of them hit, twelve or so in total, but the beast was only mildly effected by the impact of the bullets. Slowly turning its head towards our group it grinned. I could see it clearly in the night vision as it disappeared near to instantly. “What the hell was that! I clipped it with a half a magazine from this gun and nothing!” said Hagan.

      Lying on the ground was Lieutenant Williams, who I ran over to check on. I leaned over to where he was lying and checked his pulse, “He’s still alive, someone have a medkit handy?” I yelled. I grabbed him by the shoulders and slid him over to one of the generators, propping up his head. There was a large blood puddle near where he was lying, hopefully from the enemy. Propping his legs up it spun around to see if anyone was getting a medkit. Hagan grabbed one and tossed it to me. Flipping the case open I grabbed the portable x-ray viewer. Scanning up and down his body I found no apparent damage besides a crippling broken leg.

      “I asked a question, answer me dammit, what was that! It’s invincible! Is it some new king of Covenant soldier?” yelled Hagan, clearly scared out of his mind by the beast, whom of which had all the traits of a legend, yet it was real, it was something that truly existed. It was as scary as finding out that the monster under your bed is real. The kind of terror that the Humans on Harvest must have felt.



Taking Tritus Part Two
Date: 18 December 2002, 9:38 pm

“Calm down, there has to be a rational explanation for this,” I began to fumble with his broken leg, knowing that I could not move it or he would risk injury as the Commander tried to calm Hagan, who was unspeakably confused by this. He was not one to anger or confuse, and the monster had done both. “It could have been that you just clipped it, or something. I‘m saying that some of the rumored Covenant ‘Special Operations Elites’ have taken at least twenty rounds to the chest, they could easily be down here”
“Yeah, right, those are just something that people made up to scare others, I want an explanation, and now.” Said Private Hagan. I caught a glimpse of him out of the corner of my eye. He was looking pretty scary, veins. On his neck bulging to sizes that almost met the size of his eyes, which were also considerably larger than usual.
“Alright, maybe you missed, I mean, we were all scared, and no one was ready for combat, you had no time to think or to aim--”
“Bull shit! I am a great shot, you all know that! I didn’t miss. I never miss!”
“Well, I’m out of explanations then. I still think that it was a Spec Ops Elite.”
“The blood is red!” He waved to the crimson puddle behind him. “Elite blood is purple! It was human or some new Covenant. Either way, we have to organize some hunting parties to capture it!”
“You mean kill it, look at what it did to Carsons and Techinak. We want revenge! We have to avenge their deaths!” shouted Markson who had formerly been a quiet man of few words.
“Calm down,” said the commander, “We only have a few more hours to wait here until we are--”
“Are picked up? Yeah, in black bags! This thing is killing us one by one, and at this rate none of us will make it out of here unscathed, we have to do something about it now!” shouted Hagan.
“Calm down, no one is leaving in a body bag from here on out, we can kill it, just give us the chance. If it is something that is alive, we can kill it. It’s a law of nature, it will die, and we will make it do that within 5 hours, and we will all make it out of here alive, but first, we have to get the power to work. Two of you, take the door, and the others help out with Williams.” Said the commander, though the rest of us was only one. Our numbers were too thin now with three casualties. “Caleb, how is Williams?” Thank god, the first name basis is back!
“A fractured leg, he is in shock, but otherwise fine.” I said while continuing to give him some painkillers and standing up to get something to create a splint. Because the Covenant don’t use projectile weapons, most of the things inside our medical kits were designed to treat burns and blood loss, not broken bones. I put a hand around a metal pole on one of the parts of the reactor that was used as a railing and pulled on it. I pulled the first time with no results, the second, however, ripped it off the wall. I set the hollow pipe down on another nearby railing and held the other side in my hand. Lifting one of my legs I stepped down near the middle and bent it so that it was only half its original length. Walking back over to the place where Williams was resting I grabbed some of the bandages, wrapping them around his leg and the splint. It was the best I could do, but he was still near to immobile. I slapped the side of his cheek lightly to wake him up. His eyes opened for a second, just long enough for me to say, “You’ll be alright” and for him to smile before passing out again.


Williams stood, leaning in the corner weakly on the makeshift crutches that we had created. I stood cleaning the barrel of my gun. The commander finally finished fixing the reactors at twice his expected ETA. We had five hours till extraction, and things were getting tense. No one had spoken in the past half hour, and though the mood was much brighter with the power back, I doubted that anyone would talk soon. It was too tense perhaps, but no one knew what to do, or even what we were fighting, so everyone was mad at someone, using them as a scapegoat. The commander wanted to break the silence for at least a half hour, but didn’t know what to say. I could tell by the way he nervously tapped his foot. I finished cleaning my gun and lowered it, the commander taking the opportunity to speak. “This. This thing. It’s playing war games with us. It has wounded one of us to slow us down. Killing us one by one, it wants to fight us as a source of fun. I want two parties, one get Williams to the elevator and wait there for extraction. Top floor if possible, and if the elevator comes up without us radioing in, brace for an assault. I want Markson and Hagan with Williams, take our heavy weapons. Caleb, Johnson, with me. We’ll try and frag the monster down here. If we call you down, meet us in the infirmary wing because we should have a special friend to dissect. Alright people, let’s move, Caleb, you’re our point man this time.” The commander yelled. His friendly attitude must have been impaired by the stress from the current situation, or his realization that we would need to be more serious if we wanted to make it out alive.
I quickly scurried to the door and raised the rifle so my eyes just barely cleared the top of the gun and prepared to march down the hallway. We were almost finished sealing off the room to assure that the power couldn’t be disabled again by welding the door shut. A minute or two later, the silence was all but broken. I was already prepared, however the others of my hunting party were still gathering the munitions they needed. Secretly I knew this was a suicide mission, for all we knew, there was nothing down here and we had all been affected by some kind of bends that made us hallucinate or something. “I’m ready, bravo team, you all locked and loaded?” I asked. Bravo was the team that would hold the evac zone with Williams, and we were Alpha, the team that would kill whatever was down here.
“Bravo, ready for extraction preps. Move out!” Hagan yelled militaristically as he began to run down the hallway. Snaking his gun and face around the corner he yelled “Clear, move!” and the rest of his men followed, Williams with his crutches and resulting limp.
I turned around and faced the commander. “Let’s follow precedent, you guys all locked and loaded?” I asked.
“Yeah, so, where do you think we should start our search?” the commander asked.
“I have no idea. But let’s just do a circle around the perimeter of the facility. Lets make a ton of noise too, it should draw it out when we pass near. After we need to shell it out, and try to hit it with as many bullets as possible. It’s relatively simple, but it’s the best I can think of.”
“Good enough Caleb. Caleb, point, I’ll take our six, Johnson, cover Caleb.” The commander ordered, acknowledging my plan. I took point and led the others forward with a wave of my hand. I took a right at the next hallway and pressed my back up against the wall, sliding along it to the end. I thought I had heard something. Readying my lucky rifle, I raised it across my chest and nodded my head off to the side signaling them of the status. Slowly leaning around the corner I saw a little girl and boy, probably six. I comfortably stepped around, alerting them. As they turned I saw that they had short necks, slightly enlarged eyes, and both were carrying a facial structure that labeled them as nothing more than five though their height could easily place them among the ranks of the seven year olds. They were both also wearing an army fatigue, the fatigue flopping idly as it hung loosely off of the tiny children.
“What are you kids doing down here?” I asked. I wondered myself, how did a pair of freakish kids get into this base dressed in military fatigues? They both stared at me for an eerie amount of time. Slowly stepping back I heard the noises of Johnson and the Commander talking as to why I was talking about a kid. Stepping around the corner they realized that I was talking to a real boy and girl. The boy had an almost inquisitive stare on his face, and a few bullet holes in his fatigue near this abdomen. Raising my rifle I asked, “What are you doing down here? Who are you?”
The commander, raising an arm to try to get me to lower my rifle failed as I brushed him aside, “What are you doing Caleb? Those are just a few kids, probably as scared as us!”
“Nope, look at the ones chest.” I said, the commander quickly raising his rifle.
“What the hell? Are you two AWOL? Oh my god. You mean.. It’s one of them?” he too raised his rifle. Suddenly a series of chirps and groans came from the two of them, they were both sounding like dolphins. Suddenly they both sprung forward simultaneously. Johnson discharged a few rounds towards the male, and knocked it off to the side. The female however landed on the commander.
“Commander!” I shouted, grabbing my gun by the but and charging at the thing on the commander, smashing the front of my gun against its skull. Knocked off of the commander it raised a hand to its forehead, covering a large cut. The boy was behind her standing up. Chirping a few more times the female nodded and the male ran away. I grabbed the commanders arm and yanked him to his feet. He spat up some blood and readied his rifle again. Johnson fired a dozen more rounds at it as the commander and I ran away. Johnson then turned and began to run. As I checked behind me I saw the boy run around the corner with two rifles in his hand and toss one to the little girl. The little girl leveled the aim and fired down the hallway at me. I dropped to the ground though no shots hit anywhere near to me. The commander extended an arm for me, but I looked up, grinned, and lay back down, playing dead. He quickly continued to run onwards, down the hallway. The girl ran off, maybe to hunt the others while the boy readied his rifle in a combat stance and paced quickly down the hallway to my body. Crouching, his head still looking towards the last place where the commander was he reached down to grab my ammo. His first mistake. I chuckled opening my eyes and held the gun up to the bottom of his head. Unloading a half dozen rounds into its head was apparently lethal, it collapsed limp. This was a trick I learned in the Yakuza a while back. Just to make sure it was dead I shot it in the face a few more times. I graded the area near its armpits and dragged its body into a storage closet, locking the door and taking the gun. We could kick down the door when we needed to, so I also barred it shut. I picked up my radio and sat down outside the door. “Commander, are you ok?” I said, the radio replying by beeping as it shut off allowing him to reply.
“Fine, we lost the thing. We think, you?” He asked. I looked over at the body I had. It was near to decapitated, the top half of its head missing, its facial structure also decimated. It was too bad I had to make such a mess of it, but it had to be done.
“Yep.” I said, “I got it too. I’m sure that it’s dead. Can you guys get down here and check it out?”
“You got one!?!” he asked, astonished at the result of my ambush. “I would have never thought, I hesitated to leave you behind because, frankly, these things are pretty damn close to immortal. Well, we’ll be there as son as we can, the storage closet near the place where we first encountered them?”
“Yeah. It’s inside with me. Come quick, who knows what these things are.” I said.
“Alright, we’re on our way. Just sit down and wait, see what you can tell from the body. We should be there within a few minutes.” Said the commander.
“Rodger, I’ll bunker down here. Get here quick though.” I said before shutting down the radio. I thought for a second. The extraction teams should probably know about this too. I turned the radio back on. “Hello?” I heard some noises from the other end of the radio as someone grabbed the radio. I could hear the hum of the elevator in the background as well. “Hmmm? Is this the commander?”
“No, it’s Caleb Mitchell, are you guys still ok?”
“Yeah, why?”
“Well, we caught one of those things. I killed it. It’s a little kid, must be six or seven. But you should have seen it. Hagan, right?”
“Yes sir, this is Hagan.” He said.
“Alright, remember the one that you tagged with a few shots?”
“I remember that son of a bitch, did you get him?”
“Yeah, just for you. Six bullets stuck in his side. Nice work.”
“Wait, a little kid and he took six shots and didn’t even die?”
“Yeah, we don’t know what it is, but I am contacting the LFC to find out. Whatever the hell this thing is we should have known about it before they sent us down here.”
“Right, well our team is half way up the elevator shaft, so we should be fine. Just make it out alive guys, but now that you killed it, aren’t you ok?” Hagan asked, clearly misinformed regarding their numbers.
“No, we IDed another target in Tritus. We have no idea how many there are, but we should be up in just a while. Chances are that now what the LFC knows something is down here they will let us extract.” I explained.
“Right, we’ll send the elevator down for you.” Said Hagan.
“Rodger.” I said, turning off the radio again. Grabbing the box that I had o carry the long range transmitter I began to set up the tiny dish. Finally setting it up I called out for our command team. “Command team, do you read me?”
“Yeah, we have your signal. What’s happening down there, the lights were out for a little while.” Asked a clearly misinformed captain. I had no idea how far out of the loop he was, so I decided to keep quiet regarding out special friend.
“Can you connect me to the LFC?” I asked. Even if he said no, I would still talk to them, it was just a matter of how quickly I can convince him that it is necessary. It all depended on to what degree he followed rules. The LFC is usually busy with “important” business like all the political crap, which never turns out to be much more than whether to build a new school or not.
“Nope, the LFC is on some important business right now.” He replied. It was expected, but I had a plan to talk with them.
“Alright. How close are you to them?” I asked.
“They are right behind me at the counsel table. Why?”
“Well, ask them about some kids we found. See if it gets their attention away from this… important business.” I said. I hoped that this wasn’t that secret of a project so that none of them would know. I did a good job sounding cryptic though… I could really be a guy in a black suit and tie if I wanted and do the governments dirty work… I scratched the bottom of my chin thinking of all the things I could do.
“Ok, I’m back.” The man said
“Yeah, and?”
“Well, Counsel Ginkog wants to talk to you.” He said.
“Well tell Counsel Ginkog,” Ginkog was a well known name around the counsel, the military director and a real stubborn man. It might take some interrogation to get him to talk about that this thing is. Or maybe if I threatened to go public, “to get his ass over to the phone and tell me what I am fighting down here!”
“Fighting Lieutenant?” He asked, I hesitated, about to talk when he said, “You know what? Don’t say it. Just don’t say it. Here, here is Ginkog.”
“What is it Lieutenant?” asked Ginkog in his naturally deep voice. He had thirty years of decorated military service behind him and showed the mental scars openly, “I should hope this isn’t a call for an autograph or something, because I am a very busy man--”
“Too busy to take care of your own kids?” I asked, hoping that would be clear enough to alert him if he was in the loop, and cryptic enough to keep him out if that was the case.
“Look, who do you work for, the Press? That was just a little thing, and I swear I am paying child support. You can’t tell anyone!” he said. It looks like he needed a little more clarification.
“No, some kids on Tritus.” There was a long silence.
“I told them to call off that experiment years ago!”
“Wait a second, experiment?”
“Yes, to make something special. Something that really could be all it could be. It saw more failures than successes, so I had it cancelled, a real money drainer, cost trillions of credits a year. But listen, the kids you saw, what did they look like?”
“Well, they were armed and we think they killed a few of our men. Get this, they snapped their necks. Not many people can do it they way they did, and up till now, we hadn’t even seen it. But this one took about ten shots to the side and walked away unscathed. What are these things?” I said.
“Were they tall?” he asked
“Yeah, they were, about two years ahead of usual judging by their facial structure.” I said replying to his question.
“My god. They finished it.”
“Finished what? Some experiment? Nothing can take bullets as well as these things. No experiment could make kids snap peoples necks.”
“This one could.” Another silence, “I want you and your men out of there immediately. An extraction team will be departing in 30 minutes. I want you to destroy the elevator to Tritus after you leave, do you hear me?”
“Wait, but I still have more questions!” I yelled.
“As I said before, I am a very busy man, and I have no more time to waste with you.” He said. I could tell he was putting up a show for the counsel to make it look like nothing special was happening. “And good luck.” He said discreetly. The phone he was using clicked as he shut it off. I sighed. We were clearly in over our heads. I collapsed the satellite and slid it back into its case. I then put that into my field backpack that had my munitions as well as many other things in it. Which reminded me of something, I was hungry, and so was my gun. Slipping another magazine into the rifle and throwing the other one to the side I grabbed a ration and quickly swallowed the food. Dropping the wrapper I crawled quickly over to the body and inspected it some more. I left the remainder of the head alone and instead searched its fatigues for anything that might clue me in as to what these are. I flipped over its right arm to find a tiny barcode on the bottom of its wrist, but other than that, nothing out of the ordinary. It also looked to be much stronger than me, and that was some feat. Its muscles were infinitely powerful from my basic observations, and I was almost surprised that it was so powerful, despite having such a light frame and young age.



Taking Tritus Last Part
Date: 23 December 2002, 8:45 am

      I began to move again but stopped suddenly. I heard a mechanical whir in the room. I quickly looked left and right, nothing. The room was well enough lit I could be fairly well assured of that. Again I head a weak whir. Flipping into a sitting position I nervously tried to pinpoint the location the noise was emanating from. I listened. I could faintly hear it. It was coming from the corner. Walking over I raised my rifle. The whirring continued as I searched some more, I was pretty sure I was getting close. I pressed an ear against the cold, metal wall. The noise wasn’t coming from the wall, it was in the room. I checked the rifle. The safety was on, so I quickly flipped it off and cocked the rifle. I suddenly realized where the whir was coming from as the commander came through the door.
      “Congratulations! Nice work man!” he said, I raised two fingers and nodded up towards the ceiling, silencing him. He looked up, seeing the security camera and carefully looked out into the hallway and peered both ways, making sure no one was following him. He stepped inside. “Is it active?” he asked quietly. I nodded. The camera moved again honing in on his face. “Are the cables intact?” I nodded a no to him. He walked over and looked at it. It was like all the rest, the video decoder clipped out, but this one was moving, watching us. Why? I had no idea, but it was still active, and unless the operator of the camera was extremely lucky, they were following my movements, or in other words, they were watching me. I quickly grabbed my pistol and shot the bottom of the camera a few times. I looked down, ignoring the camera intentionally, the last thing I needed was more stress.
      ”Get Johnson checking this out, I want to know what this is and why it is here, and Commander, you’d better look at this.” I gestured to the radio. I had recorded my conversations down here ever since people began to disappear, you know, in case none of us made it out alive. I had conveniently recorded the conversation I had recently held with Counsel Ginkog, all of it. If I did make it out alive, I would also have my sweet revenge blowing the Counsels love child affair wide open, revenge for him sending us down here. The commander listened to the tape as Johnson dissected the dead monster. Using crude scalpels, nothing more than a combat knife, and even cruder tools beyond that for other purposes, Johnson sliced apart the beast. The commander, after hearing the tape that I had, was shocked, revolted by our governments own capacity to send some of its own men on a near to suicide mission. Johnson finished first, the commander with his jaw gaping to a size that near to matched the incision in the side of the monster.
      “Well guys, look at what we have here. We have an almost normal superhuman. Bones unusually strong, some extra ones to cover weak points like the throat. This is no ordinary man. I cut into the rid cage and found most of the ordinary organs, though they were all revamped to get superior power out of them, and then I found this.” He held up a red, fleshy sac. “It’s a blood sac, see, when this thing loses blood, it just fills it right backup, an auto blood reserve. That is so cool, I mean, it could practically become immortal. But besides that, the skin. It isn’t really like ours. It isn’t really like anything I’ve ever seen before. I mean, it looks like ours, duh, but it is actually cybernetic, and when a hole is created, like a gunshot wound the nearby skin stretches to cover it. Seriously, this is one creature you do not want to fight, not even on a bad day. There are countless other things too. The eyes appear to be able to zoom in, their brain is heavily modified, these things are hardly even human. That paired up with the Counsels confession forces me to believe that these are some prototype super soldier.”
      “We checked the whole facility, there is no facility in this base that could possibly do that. They had to come from somewhere else.”
      “Ah. You have a point there, and you are right. They didn’t come from here. I noticed something before anyone from our team died, the Aquios was missing.” Johnson said.
      “And the Aquios is what?”
      “A large submarine down here, about fifty feet long, and it has been gone for quite some time. Too long. It left for something, and given its air and fuel supplies, it should be due back at least six hours ago.”
      “And that means?”
      “Well, one of two things, that it is parked somewhere in a remote location, or they killed it somehow.” He said.
      “Alright, any beacons we could use to find it?”
      “Nope, radar has been down forever, wasn’t even working when we first showed up. But there is the Aquios 2 and 3 still docked, and we could easily just search for it.”
      The commander considered it for a few seconds. He was not one to waste time in a search that may produce nothing, so he clearly expected a recovery when he beckoned for us to go to the airlock and suit up.

*************************************************************

      I loaded a volley of spears into the speargun, and left my rifle in the corner behind some crates. All my equipment was gone, replaced with a large space suit caliber bulky suit. Its green color was tarnished in only a few places, and was kept in surprisingly good condition despite how the nerds in these labs often had no disregard that the money the UNSC was spending on them would really be much more useful if spent on a rifle for a front line soldier. I slid the glass helmet over my head and began to see, or rather hear immediate effects. The outside noises were butchered, a result of the thick glass plating that kept the lethal water from crushing my head. My breathing, however, was magnified, echoing in the tiny dome. All three of us stepped into the next room, seeming very heroic due to our lowered range of motion from the suits. We were almost moving in slow motion as we stepped into the airlock and I pressed a red rectangular button. The door behind us slid shut, and our last glimpses of the inside of the structure, now all we could see was the gray room that was the airlock. The air drained from the room, as I pressed a yellow button. Three lights, all white labeled with the first three numeral began to illuminate as I moved a fist over the green button. 3, 2, 1 it read, and as it said 1 I hit the button and released the outer door of the facility to the ocean. Water flooded into our room, and forced a glowing fish to hit the commander in the face, sucked in as if the airlock was a vacuum.
      The swirling water eventually subsided, and the blackness of the ocean filled in. a flood light shimmered in the distance, giving us enough light to press a button on our wrists and activate the lights on our own suits. The beams of light reflecting off the particles of sediment in the water formed a glowing beam before each of us, extending just long enough to see two arms lengths forwards. We stepped out of the airlock and stepped onto a ladder that led to the launch bays, and stepped down slowly, scaling the wall of the dome structure, and arriving at the sediment covered base of the facility after about ten minutes of scaling. Sunk to my knees in filth, I walked over to the first launch bay and stepped in. The columns near me formed a sense of relative safety, that and the flood lights that were set up within. Our legs motion through the sediment cased a brown cloud to engulf the bottom half of us, and as we stepped onto the cement ledge. We all hopped along in the low gravity, and effects of the water to the submarine Aquios 3, and clamored clumsily atop it. The commander kneeled down and grabbed the hatch, twisting it a few times, he pulled it up and revealed an interior coated in complex patterns of buttons, at least three hundred in numbers. The commander dropped inside the Aquios 3 and stepped aside as Johnson dropped into the craft. Following behind them I placed my hands on the handrails and lowered down into the craft, closing the hatch behind me as the commander hit a glowing white button. The water drained slowly from the craft, and as it reached our feet, the commander twisted his helmet and listened to the refreshing his of the pressure equalizing. Johnson and myself followed suite, and our wants, cracking the helmets seal and slipping off the suit. Sitting down next to the commander in the second seat of the craft I looked out of the glass dome that was the “window” of the ship. You couldn’t, however, see anything from the window, the murky water blocking any possible vision. Johnson sat down at the navigator seat and flipped a few switched activating the navigation systems. The screen flickered as a green 3d map appeared. It was real time, I could tell, and it was also from our perspective, graphing it out as a visual aide. The commander too was busily leaning forwards flipping switches as the ships engines warmed up. He leaned back into the pilot seat and grabbed the yolk of the craft, and in a surprisingly graceful manner, slowly accelerating and slipping out of the artificial cavern.
      Speaking into the flight recorder he began to document the mission, “Alright, exiting the docking bay, beginning search for what we believe is the remains of the Aquios one in the sixteenth sea column. Activating flood lights across the board.” The sea before us was suddenly very bright. “The radar signature of the Aquios will be buried in muck if it is at the bottom of the sea, so a manual search is in need.” The craft sped away through the water, searching for the mysterious object.

*************************************************************

      8 Minutes later, it was located. A sealab much smaller than the Tritus, the unmarked lab hosted only the Aquios and a tiny lab. Refastening our helmets the commander docked our craft. The Sealab, surprisingly was only a couple hundred feet form the main lab, and pointed strait at it. Floating out of the craft, we stepped within the airlock, now half full of muddy, murky water. Stepping over to the wall Johnson hit a button and the door slid shut behind us, the room suddenly becoming much lighter. Hitting another button he drained the water from the room, the commander slipping his helmet off quickly once again. I stared at him wondering why he hated the suit so much.
      “What? I have a little claustrophobia.” He said, clearly spotting my glare.
      “Claustrophobia? You’re on a freaking sealab, the ultimate kingdom of tiny places and camped confines. How can you survive?” I asked, fumbling with the speargun, the only weapon besides a combat knife we were allowed to bring with us. I popped my helmets seal and slid it off my head. I began to shed the suit as the commander moved towards me.
      “Wait, leave that on, it’s is probably half decent armor.” He said as I stopped unzipping the suit. And began to move towards the door into the main facility. Johnson, who took off his helmet while we were talking, hit the button to open the lab to the airlock. As it opened my ears popped, temporarily filtering my hearing though the minor problem was fixed as I swallowed. Taking point I slid across the wall to the hallway, and checking both the left and right I signaled that the room was clear. Spinning to the right I paced along the curving hallway until we had arrived at the opposite end of the facility.
      “What’s that smell?” Johnson asked, smelling the scent of decay.
      “I don’t know, let’s go in and figure it out later.” I said, moving closer to the smells source. Stepping up to the door I pressed my hand against the security hand scanner. The door showed a red light and denied me access. The commander, confused, went and pressed his palm against the machine, it denying him too. Johnson was already searching for an alternate route in. A door behind us was unlocked, so though we figured that it was out of our way we slid that door open to reveal a dark storage closet. A foul stench came from within it. Standing to the left of the doorframe I quickly scanned the room with my flashlight. The room was full of bodies, and the floor slick with crimson blood. Some of the people, scientist judging by the way they were dressed had no gunshot wounds, probably the same snapped necks that Techinak and Carsons died from. About a half dozen military personnel also lie on the floor, most of them with gunshot wounds to the chest and head regions. The commander groaned, though I doubt it was from disgust, probably actually sympathy. Most of these men were probably killed in cold blood.
      ”Oh my god. Look at all of them.” Johnson said. He was a relative newbie to the berets, and wasn’t ready for such emotional shock. I however was drained of these emotions and decided instead to grab a body and slide it over to the door, hopefully they were granted access. The scientists head wobbled loosely, not connected by more than a thread of his spinal column and his skin as I dragged him. The commander however, who had seen even more field action that me was also sickened by this, causing me to question whether or not I was doing the right thing, dragging the body like I did. Pressing it’s cold dead hand against the panel I was glad to see that a green light guaranteed my access as the door hissed open. Inside was a somewhat short hallway and a wall. A metal door to the left and a large glass window to the right along with computers that dotted the walls, the room was clearly some kind of monitoring room. Behind the window I could see little, it was too far away to see much detail, but the room was clearly a body building room, and was host to a variety of weightlifting equipment as well as a target dummy of all the different breeds of Covenant and one that I had never seen before. It was tall, and looked like a large monkey with thick fur.
      The commander patted me roughly on the shoulder, “Nice work Caleb, you have a future ahead of you in the Marine corps.”
      “I had a future behind me too. I already made it to the berets.” I replied.
      “Right…” he said. To him that was no achievement at all as long as he could do more.
      Johnson, who was in the room gestured at something and yelled back to us, “Hey guys, come check this out.”
      “What?” I asked as I stepped in, suddenly feeling a lot heavier.
      “Watch.” he replied. He set his speargun down on the ground near to the open door. As soon as he let go it began to slide across the floor slowly into the bottom of the doorframe. “I think that we found an artificial gravity field. This is some kind of training facility, and look at these cryo tubes. I looked up at the inside of the circular room, its walls lined with about 32 cryo bays. Two were empty, and a few coated in red blood from some slip ups, probably the two that got free trying to save their comrades, accidentally slipping up and casing depressurization, which splattered their friends. The rest were still in hyper-sleep in their cryo tubes. I grabbed my rife and stepped into the room, feeling an immediate increase in my weight. Slamming the butt of the rifle down on the first cryo tube I watched as the first of them died. From the freezer burn as their absolute zero slumber quickly became lethally cold. Moving to the next cryo tube I smashed in the glass finding similar results until I had crushed in the glass of every cryo tube in the room. MY merciless killings were looked down upon by the commander and Johnson, though I knew that each of them knew it had to be done. Stepping back out of the chamber I tilted my head quickly towards the computers. Johnson, recovering from his shock quickly leapt to the task, immediately typing and opening up a series of directories. With a few more prompts, he had opened up the mission statements regarding what was down here.
      <Sept. Entry. Loading… … … … … … … Completed>
      This is Agans, reporting to give a routine check up. We are having some little problems, just glitches in the systems. One of the cryo bays sealed itself and it took us a day to release the clamps properly, just a minor setback though. The Spartan 3 prototypes are getting to unusually high levels of thought, they have began to create leaders among their ranks with no intervention from us, they are forming their own society. This could help us, because if we were to execute the leaders they would follow us like docile lambs.
      <Oct. Entry. Loading… … … … … … … Completed>
      This is Agans. We killed the leader, and all is well now. They are basically worshipping us. In the weight room, they made it to 3 g’s today, lifting their usual workload of 15 hundred pounds. We seem to be having a routine month…

      Johnson skipped the rest of the posts up till the December post.
      <Dec. Entry. Loading… … … … … … … Completed>
      This is the crew of the Tritus. We are banding together now. All communications were cut a while back, and members of the team have started to go missing with no explanation. Tow of the Spartans are missing, so we sense that they are at the center of this. They were the leaders. We didn’t know that they would fight back, we gave them sedatives, but they had somehow avoided receiving them. We need help. If anyone sees this… Help us…

      Johnson scratched the back of his head. I too had gathered a disgust for the nerds down here after seeing that. They executed the leader? But that was what I had just done to all of them. I was conflicted inside over this, as was the rest of the team. The commander however had made up his mind. We were done here. He linked his suit to the computers and uploaded all the lab reports and saved them for later retrieval.

*************************************************************

      I stepped out of the airlock at Tritus and unfastened my helmet, my ears popping again. Slipping out of the suit I went to get my bag, but it was gone. The Spartan had found it. I loaded the speargun. It’s just one of those days. The commander and Johnson followed me as we ran through the hallways to the elevator as quick as I could, and scrambled aboard without a single sighting of the thing. Speargun in hand I frantically hit the elevator call button as I heard the commander and Johnson catching up. I was like lightning fleeing.. To think I once was considered brave. Bouncing the gun up and down in my hand I waited for the elevator to arrive, it’s hum getting closer, s I began to hear distant footsteps. The elevator hit our floor with lighting fast speed, though it seemed to take much longer for it to come down this time than when we had first come. Jumping inside the circular elevator shaft along with the commander and Johnson I hit the elevator button. As the elevator began to seal the doors I saw a blur of the Spartan run closer. The doors slammed shut just as the Spartan began to smash the door.
      “Tracy, get us out of here! Any way that you can speed up this damn elevator?” I shouted up at the ceiling.
      “No. I am afraid that there is no way. I am detecting an unauthorized launch of the Aquios 3 though. Hailing craft.” A pause ensued though we knew that it was the Spartan and that she would not reply. “No reply from the craft. Checking subsystems for errors. None found. Would you like me to attempt to communicate again?”
      “No Tracy, just try to get us out of here!” I said, my foot tapping the floor rampantly. The noise echoed down the long tunnel as we continued up towards the surface. Jumping out of the elevator and into the rain as quick as possible I rolled a grenade back into the shaft and watched it slip through the grates, falling down the elevator shaft. The crew who was stationed at the landing site now had time to react to our arrival and began to stand, confused by our actions. Three seconds later an explosion sounded off accompanied by a rush of air as the shafts delicate sides exploded outwards allowing water to rush in. The wind dried up a little, though not enough as the rain continued to pour down on us.
      “What the hell happened? You just sunk Tritus! Why the hell did you do that?!?” shouted a clearly angered and confused Hagan, who had his rifle ready nonetheless.
      ‘The.. the thing… Spartan facility… They killed them all…” I was out of breath.
      “Who was killed? The scientists?”
      Regaining my composure, “Yes, the scientists… and the MP were all killed.”
      “And what the hell is a Spartan?”
      “We don’t really know, but it kicked the shit out of the crew.” I said.
      Suddenly the water behind us exploded as the submarine surfaced. “And here it comes.” Said the commander, who readied his harpoon gun. The hatch opened as the cloud behind it exploded, a Pelican flying by at low speeds and a high velocity, flames shooting from an engine, a few plasma volleys following it. A banshee also followed suite, flying low and fast after the Pelican. Coming into clear view above us was one of the last things you ever wished to see, a Covenant battleship, and we were sitting right below the beam used to incinerate planets. The clouds scattered as it hovered above us, the torrent of rain averted from us. The purple mass began to glow, it’s beam charging. It was all over unless we got to the sub, which required the death of our special friend. Suddenly a person flung up from the side of the landing platform, a trail of water streaming behind it. I fired off a spear at it, and missed, Markson fired a few rounds at it as well, hitting it once. It landed on Hagan, pinning him on the ground and delivering a swift deathblow to his throat. It leapt into the air again as we fired more munitions at it. Hitting the ground and accelerating to a speed where it almost blurred, it circled around behind the commander and struck him in the back of the neck, his body swiftly collapsing. I fired another spear at it, this one sticking through its shoulder. If was hit with the recoil of the impact, though the monster ran again, this time to Markson. Kicking him in the abdomen Markson was launched through the air and landed in the water, swept away by the waves of the torrent. Williams who lie on the ground defenseless stared in horror as the beast grabbed Johnson and threw him into the elevator shaft. His screams echoed as he fell to his death. I aimed for his chest and fired again, a rod impaling him near to the diaphragm. Angered it ran towards me and struck me over the side of my head. I threw the gun at Williams as I flew backwards, sliding on the slick, wet landing platform. I grabbed the combat knife and waved it at it, threatening it’s next attack. Instead of charging me it pulled the rod out of its shoulder. The lightning struck near to the landing platform as it raised the pole and hit me in the jaw with it. There was a great surge of pain as it smashed in my jaw. Some of my teeth flew and bounced to a stop on the nearby ground of the platform. It flipped the pole over, and grabbing it with both hand prepared to thrush it through my head when suddenly it’s face exploded, a harpoon smashing through it and into the wall. The bloody body collapsed on my legs as I lie back to die. My teeth, which were lying on the nearby ground, began to rumble as the incinerating death ray from above melted Williams and myself.





bungie.org