Showing posts with label UNSC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UNSC. Show all posts

Saturday, July 19, 2014

One last Hurrah!

The ground beneath and above him trembled. The cave shook and small particles of dust filled the air. The sound reminded Lt. Harkin of a beast’s growl, that soft roar that the lost wolves of Eridanus VII used to let go, right before striking down their prey. That’s what they were, he thought, a helpless prey, and nothing more. The menacing beast of the Covenant had taken it all. Reach, New Mombasa, his sight and soon they would take the Earth. Humanity was doomed to become nothing more than a whisper of the stars, just one more of the hundreds of thounsands of creatures that had gone extinct.

He was useless; the war had made him a tragedy. He had abandoned all hope, and accepted fate as inevitable, just like the ancient Greek used to do in those times of yore. The weapons he had used didn’t stop the monsters; they hadn’t even scratched the fierce elites. Only a few grunts had fallen to the filmsy bullets of the once trusty Assault Rifle. And even then, it had ammounted to nothing. Grunts were much like the Hydra, if you killed one, ten more took its place.

He had gone up in the ranks, not through heroic deeds, or missions accomplished, but through the sole act of surviving. Time and time again he had seen his comarades fall, pierced by large pink needles, blown to pieces, or victims of friendly fire. All died but him; the most useless and coward of them all had survived. He who longed for death, lived to see another day; and those who dreamt of a tomorrow, laid dead, charred on the molten ground. Such a tragedy can only be the work of fate, of an unavoidable and relentless fate.

He had tried to anticipate it. He had walked willingly towards the glassing in New Momabasa, but he hadn’t been reached by the blast radius. He wanted it all to end, but he couldn’t muster the courage to put a bullet to his head. It would dishonor those who perished before him. His release from life would only happen in the heat of battle. The glassing was the last he had seen. He could get his sight back, or at least that’s what the medic had told him, but only in a Hospital and with the right care and instruments. Out in the battlefield there were no such concesions.

He wasn’t angry, he prefered it that way, since he wouldn’t be able to dodge the plasma bolts. The Covenant was coming, he knew better than to fool himself. Commander Keyes said that they could find the base and that it would happen eventualy. He liked her; she wasn’t like the others he had served during the war. She didn’t lie to them. She was fierce and strong, but she was way over her head. One frigate, a small base, a few soldiers, mostly wounded, and some Pelicans could not stop the Covenant. They only lived still, because they hadn’t moved forward, but it was a matter of time. Death was coming. It didn’t matter how many sorties they completed or how deep they dug, the Convenant would find them.

Somenone carried him to the Pelican’s landing bay, the uppermost one in the base. He had requested to be there on some false heroic excuse, he had been granted the request. He imagined no one would have the heart to refuse him, every bit of morale was necessary. Even if he was blind, he could still reflect the spirit of the UNSC soldiers. The truth, however, was grim. He thought that that particular landing bay was the base weakest point, and surely the first to be raided.

That morning he didn´t hear the usual early roars of the Pelicans. Three left instead of the usual two. And half an hour later, a fourth. He had been there enough times to know something was off.

This is it” he said to himself as he relaxed by the stairs. It was a matter of waiting now. Only a few more hours and the end would come. Death would stand before him, give him back his sight and let him read the pages of his destiny that were written long ago. He hoped he would die like the greek of the island of Milos, who did not struggle with fate, but instead accepted it humbly, as was narrated by Thucydides.

He remembered that there was another time when he would wait for hours. Just like the people on the island saw the Athenian army of three thounsand strong and expected Spartan help, he had hoped a Spartan would come. Those towering convenant murdering machines that were undefeatable. He had waited so many times for them, and they had never shown. Not once, not to save him, not to save his comarades, not to save the people of Milos. He was convinced they were no more than a lie, a carefuly built ruse to push them to fight harder, to hold the line one more minute. But it had been pointless, almost everything was lost. And what little remained would soon disappear. The engines of the Pelican crackled as the thrusters stoped and the huge metalic bird landed.

A Spartan!” someone claimed. Harkin’s heart skipped a beat.

For real?!” he could barely believe it.

Yeah man! For real!”


And so, everything he hoped came to be, a Spartan had come for him.

Monday, April 14, 2014

Contact

UNSC Controlled Space – Undisclosed Date [REDACTED] 2530

Margaret glanced at the files one last time, as if she had missed something. She never missed anything, that's why she had been picked for the job in the first place. That was how she had kept it all these years. Yet, somehow, something was missing here, and she couldn’t find what it was. But he did, even if he wasn't aware of it.

Send him in” she said begrudgingly.

Right away ma’am” replied an AI. Margaret had long since stopped trusting humans. Whenever the outmost secrecy was needed, AIs were the only ones reliable, and then not every AI was. But some of them were the perfect fit for the job. You couldn’t just order someone to forget something; no matter how faithful the soldier was, he simply couldn’t let go. An AI’s memories, however, could be deleted at the press of a button, and in cases they would even do it themselves.

Them…selves” Margaret murmured to herself. She had become accustomed to smart AIs and to thinking of them as part of her staff. But no matter how smart, an AI could be corrupted by enemies both foreign and domestic. You could never be too careful, specially at the head of ONI. For that very same reason Margaret had four different AIs commissioned and assigned to her. Two of them were officially reported as malfunctioning and decommissioned. Not quite the truth, since they handled a lot of her affairs as head of ONI. Of course, they did everything that needed to be done in secrecy. Forging security footage, changing dates, logs and records, and even holding files like the one that was displayed in front of her. These two AIs were smart, but Margaret had asked that the personalities be removed, she wanted them to be as cold and dispassionate as possible.

The door opened, a man in black uniform stepped in, and the door shut tight behind him. The room became absolutely sound proof, and the man could feel the vacuum building outside the door. Margaret had full control; she could even choke everyone on deck if needed. The man clenched his jaw as soon as he stepped into her office. He tried to hide it, right before he saluted, but she noticed. Only a few had entered her Office and survived the encounter. Most had been transferred to distant, forgotten stations and jobs barely known to human kind. Very few had become her most senior Officers and one, just one, had become her Achilles heel.

You may sit” Margaret sounded cold, she was not happy and there was no reason to hide it. The man briskly sat in front of her. She knew everything there was to know about him, but she didn’t know him at all. His rank and name were just filler, not the essence of who he was, and more importantly they did not say if he deserved any sort of chance.

Guide me through the events” Margaret looked deeply into his eyes.

It’s all there ma’am” the man said “I’ve spoken countless times with the AIs”

I know, and believe me, I’ve read it countless times”.The way she pronounced the word ‘countless’ produced a spike in the man's heart rate, she was told by one of the AIs “But now, I want to hear it from you”.

Margaret wanted to hear every word of his report coming out of his mouth. She had a natural gift to detect liars and to not tolerate any kind of incompetence. Precious gifts that had helped her more than once.

Yes ma’am” he did not stutter and that pleased her. She hated whenever an ONI Officer showed fear.

I was doing a scout mission. Searching in the UNSC Prowler “Hades” for Covenant forward positions” the man paused for a brief second as if thinking whether or not to go in full detail “The mission came sanctioned per FleetCom, ONI, Section 3. Senior Officer Heinder had signed the request”. Heinder, the name rang a bell... It was one of Ackerson’s men. Margaret made a mental annotation to send him her regards later that evening. The man in front of her, Brigs, had chosen to go the full disclosure route, he was pledging his allegiance to her. Margaret did not care one bit, ONI wasn’t about loyalty, but about power, the rawest power in existence in the UNSC.

I surveyed the planetoid XF-063, codenamed Onix, since the absence of tectonic movements and the presence of Forerunner structures made it ideal for the Covenant to set as a FOB”, ‘Forerunner’ a word that had become a problem for Margaret. “A Covenant Forward Operations Base in the region would…” the man began to say.

I know what an FOB is, and what it would do, and as I recall it is not what I asked you to tell me” Brigs heart rate spiked again and then came down.

Sorry ma’am, will not happen again” Brigs replied.

See to it that it does not” Brigs gently bowed his head in acknowledgment and proceeded with his narration.
The Prowler, the systems and the on board AI, Locker, seemed nominal, the planetoid showed the same readings as it had the previous year, in 2529, but then out of nowhere some sort of shockwave hit the ship. It wasn’t as hard as a direct impact, but noticeable none the less”.

To what kind of impact are you referring to as a ‘direct impact’?” Margaret needed precise information and Brigs did not disappoint.

Debris field impact, NavCom systems don't even detect them or issue warnings to the crew, they vary in diameter but most aren’t larger than 30 inches, the armor plating can take it, but you feel it resonating through the hull. You get used to it” Brigs realized he was derailing again and went back to his retelling of the events.
What was peculiar was that all systems went haywire, comms, sensors, even artificial gravity. A second later, everything went back to normal. I suspected foul play and filed a report immediately, which brought me here, to you.” He wasn’t telling the whole truth and they both knew it.

That’s not what brought you here” Margaret said.

No ma’am, it was the fact that when I checked the AI it had been compromised. It’s memory had been completely wiped, everything, files, NavCom data, everything save for three things. Two unidentified words and a log, a record of sorts. That’s what brought me here.”

Correct. And I’m sure you already know that for security reasons and until further notice you are listed as MIA according to our database, so is Locker and the Prowler ‘Hades’, acknowledge?” He didn’t know and Margaret knew that, and this was the most civil way to communicate it.

Yes ma’am” Brigs did not seem surprised.

You will be given a new identity and reassigned, you will play catch with me o you will most definitely disappear, acknowledge?” Margaret knew that he was better off dead, but after the continuous and colossal cost of the Battle of Harvest she had the feeling that she couldn’t afford to have him killed.

I will serve wherever the UNSC needs me to, ma’am, and I will report to you as often as you ask”, ‘Good boy’ Margaret thought.

How does a Halcyon-Class sound to you?”

Sounds as good as it’s going to get.”

You will be briefed, dismissed.”

Brigs stood up, saluted and left the room. It was the last time he was going to be wearing ONI’s black uniform, but he would forever be a spook, and one that would only answer to her. A valuable asset, provided that the ship he was going to be assigned to didn’t get blown to pieces, which in all honesty was a very probable outcome.

Margaret re-read the file once more. After the event, Brigs had come back immediately in outmost secrecy. Margaret had come half-way to meet with him. She hated space, but it was sometimes necessary. While Brigs was in the brig being questioned by the AIs, the Prowler ‘Hades’ had been literally taken apart piece by piece. Everything had been studied, recorded and tested as it was being dismantled.

There were no signs of foul play; if it weren’t for the record and the unidentified words, it might have been categorized as an AI malfunction. Whoever or whatever left them wanted to make sure that the UNSC, that Margaret knew it had been there.

When the on-board AI, Locker, was examined, a few things stood out. The most peculiar of them was the log that had been deliberately left behind. It was a database log. One of ONI’s most secure and darkest server records, to be precise. It was accessed even before the AI could initiate the most basic routine commands, and it was accessed through the open Comms channels. Whoever had entered the server had first screened many files, as if looking for something. It had finally found the database of the ongoing Spartan II program and stopped on a Datafile. It wasn’t looking for something, but rather for someone. Spartan Sierra 117, to be precise.

It isn’t Covenant” Margaret said aloud as she read the report yet again.

How can you be so sure?” an AI replied.

Because if it were, we would have lost this war four years ago”. The AI didn’t reply. It was a logical conclusion.

Do you have a translation on the words?”

We have an estimate, according to Sander’s and Halsey’s research” said another soulless voice, “and it should be noted that they upped their security measures considerably, we may even have blind spots”.

I will deal with it latter, give me the estimates” Margaret was anxious. It was the same anxiety she had felt when the first Harvest reports started coming in through Loki.

Two words flashed in front of her. She read them aloud.

Ancilla; Librarian”

The first one also seems to include some sort of schematic, an AI pattern.” A truly smart AI? A trap? Margaret couldn’t be sure, and she had to go to her Aquilles heel to be sure.

Send the pattern to Halsey, tag it and track everything she discovers. Disguise it as research from someone else, someone she wouldn’t even dare to ask”.

As for the second word?” the AI asked.

We wait, and we prepare” Margaret knew these events had forced her hand “Contact Ackerson and Hood, set up a meeting, and bring the stolen Spartan. Ackerson’s ambitions may still be of use to the UNSC”


Saturday, February 8, 2014

Hard Landing

Everything seems in order” Wright yelled. Borges could hear him just fine with his headphones had he whispered but Wright loved to yell. He somehow felt better every time he shouted. Most of the time he did so on the cockpit of the D77H-TC Pelican Dropship, which didn't really bother anyone, but on the hangar bay of this battle cruiser it became rather annoying. It also pissed the hell out of the Comms officer on the bridge, who was kind enough to ignore him during the battles and flights, and that only meant trouble for both of them. It wasn't very wise to be on an officer's bad side, specially during the war.

This piece of shit will most surely kill us, but not today” said Borges. Wright's answer didn't take long to reach him “Nah! She's a good girl! Uncle Luis is kiddin' because he is a pain in the ass” Wright kept repeating the same thing over and over through the Comms, he was certainly trying to piss Hogder off. Borges thought of shutting him up, but he knew it would be a pointless argument, and besides he enjoyed seeing Hodger rage as much as the next guy. He had a peculiar OCD with order, which became extremely helpful as a Comms Officer; even with an assisting A.I. things could get very hectic in a matter of seconds. Whenever things were hectic Hodger would talk like a maniac, and his body would start having spasms. He would have been discharged were it not for how efficient he was and the little fact that the UNSC would take anyone it could get its hands on. He found a way to keep his calm during combat, but he still couldn’t control it when things got chaotic outside of battle. Seeing him at his station while docking on port had proven a real amusement for some of the crew. Hell! It was fun to piss him off just for the sake of it.

Borges mind drifted away while Wright was checking the wing thrusters for the sixth time. It had been a long time since he remembered a time of calm like this. Eight standard earth days had passed since the last slipspace jump. Granted, it was a random jump per Cole Protocol, so the chances of running into something interesting, which for Borges meant dangerous, were narrow. However this time the covies they had run into hadn’t followed them and that was unusual. After a jump the Covenant used to send one or two corvettes after any human ship. They weren’t hard to avoid but it made the possibility of being engaged in naval combat all the more likely; and that was a completely different story. Everyone’s blood froze when that possibility arose. Human ships had a very low survival rate against Covenant. He somehow felt proud of his Pelican, the odds onboard her were much higher. He felt inclined to kiss the ship, but he had an agreement with Wright, she was no pretty girl to take out, she was their daughter and they would care for her as much as she cared for them.

Wrigth, Borges, to the Captain’s Briefing Room, ON THE DOUBLE!” Hogder’s voice sounded calm. Borges could almost feel him sniggering. “I bet he ran like a little girl crying when he went to the Captain” Wright said. Borges couldn’t help to chuckle with his joke. Hodger was certainly listening to the Comms and by now he was surely shaking, more so with the following timid laughs that could be heard. They belonged to the mechanics and engineers on duty at the hangar. They all really liked Wright, and that meant getting the best assistance a Pelican flying crew could ask for. It even meant on occasion getting access to some mods that were outside of UNSC Regulation. “I’m sure we are going to get spanked” Borges said, but his comeback didn’t resonate as well as his partner’s joke. He wasn’t a funny guy, and it showed. For many it was a mystery how he and Wright put up with each other, there even was a bet going on about how long it would take them to tear each other apart. What many didn’t know was that they had been together for twelve years. They had crossed the white line of Earth’s Icarus Combat Flight Academy together; they had crashed into what was left of a Destroyer. They had been through hell and back together. “The Cap..tain said on the Dable” Hodger reminded them, he had clearly lost his calm.

Roger that Sir, on our way” replied Wright in a very militaristic tone. To everyone it seemed like a soldier following an order, but Borges knew the truth, it was a mockery. They gathered at the nose of the Pelican and marched together towards the elevator. Wright was sure it was going to be a slap on the wrist, but Borges had other things in mind. He feared something, but he couldn’t pinpoint what it was. He felt the two minute life sensation that fighter pilots talked about so much. Two Marines were waiting by the Captain’s Briefing Room. Wright’s smirk disappeared as they turned to face them; this was no slap on the wrist. They announced to the Marines and they let them in. The door locked behind them. Few ships had a private briefing room for the Captain. This room was specially designed with secrecy in mind. Borges was sure that it was a safe house for ONI’s spooks during the war with the insurrectionist. I was dimly lit, and the holomap in the middle showed some planets circling a sun. The Captain was sitting in his chair reading files on his data pad. “Are you two waiting for a formal invitation?” the Captain said without raising his sight. He had a tough as nails attitude that sit well with the crew and with what is to be expected of a Battle cruiser Captain. “Sir!” they both said in unison and approached the holomap. They stood as straight as they could. “At ease” the Captain said. He stood up and looked at them for the first time. He started walking towards them “Luis Borges and Jackson Wright I simply cannot fathom what you two want..” he said “..on the one hand I have two complete fools who love to piss on my Junior Officers; on the other, two pilots with one of the very best god damned flight records I have ever seen.”

Borges felt inclined to say something, but his military training had tough him to quench those urges. “I know only one other pilot who managed to cross the white line with a Hornet in Icarus Academy and here I stand in front of you not knowing whether to congratulate you or to give you some arrest days to think about it”. Borges couldn’t help but to remember what it felt to fly the Hornet on Earth’s gravity. He remembered the tenacity that had brought him and Jackson together. Flying across the white line was an extremely dangerous exercise that very few were given the privilege of attempting. The whole idea was to get the best students to try and maneuver a gliding Hornet in order to follow a white smoke trail laid by a drone. You had to fly solo, with no assisting electronic commands of any kind. It was just you, the stick, your calculations and the pedals that controlled the tiny Hornet’s flaps. It was considered suicidal by the books and in fact you quit the exercise by ejecting. The idea was that the student’s ego met its limits. It was very rare that a student achieved it, let alone that two managed to do so. It was considered a great honor. For Borges, it was the last time he had tested freedom.

Think very hardly about Earth men” the Captain paused; his tone was different “Think about what we are protecting. They are all yours”. Suddenly a man came out of the shadows. He had a uniform of the UNSC, however it was matte black and had no insignia. He was a spy working for ONI without a doubt. “Gentlemen, need I remind you that if anything we discuss leaves this room you will be banned traitors and executed?” He didn’t have to remind them, everyone knew this even if they had never encountered an ONI spy. It was one of their scare tactics, and so far it was paying off. Borges clenched his teeth. He had crossed an ONI Officer before, he had never told Wright. It was after the battle of Hestion, when their Pelican crashed into a Destroyer. The ship was being decimated by Covenant plasma bolts and broke formation, drifting dangerously through the battlefield. Wright was too concentrated in keeping the attached Scorpion Tank stable to notice the incoming ship; and he was too focused on avoiding Seraphs and debris to imagine that the incoming Destroyer had lost all control. When he realized what was going on, it was too late. Even if he reacted with all the Pelican’s thrusters the speed of the Destroyer was too fast to avoid it. So instead, he chose to aim for one of the hangars, which was twisted and had clearly melted due to plasma. It was the only place where there was no chance of splattering a friendly. He had very little time to warn Wright to brace for impact; but when he turned to do so he was already reading the cargo release. He had to time it right, otherwise they would be crushed by the Scorpion Tank after the improvised landing.

The crash was rough, especially on Dolores, “his girl” back then. The nose bent as it hit the charred metal, and the Dropship turned on its side. The screen in the cockpit went black as soon as they touched what was left of the hangar bay. Borges had set the thrusters to full reverse throttle before impact to reduce the collision force and it had worked, but it also tilted the Dropship. If it started to spin, they were both dead men. Wright had timed the payload release to the Pelican’s full reverse, in order to reduce the Scorpion’s momentum. It would definitely smash against the Dropship, but at least it gave them a few seconds to flee the remains provided they survived the landing. As soon as the ship hit one of the hangar’s walls, they both unbuckled and left through the Pelican’s cargo bay door. It was the furthest from their seats but also the only one that was very unlikely to jam. A jammed emergency escape hatch would otherwise mean dying crushed under the Scorpion, not the best way to go. When the door opened what little oxygen was inside the Pelican was sucked out. They both felt the pressure and the cold through their pressurized suits. They had ten minutes worth of oxygen. They to find an air pocket soon. They jumped off the Pelican in the nick of time and heard as the Tank squashed what was left of Dolores.

Goodbye my love” said Borges as he floated across the hangar. Most systems were clearly offline in the bay. Wright took out his ICE repair kit torch and approached the nearest door. He was already working on the door control panel by the time Borges caught up with him. It was tight shut so they had to force it open overriding the lock. I was hard to operate the torch and the tweezers under the pressure of space. They felt a little numb between the freezing cold and the slight pain in their joints. As soon as they opened the door they found themselves in a pressurization room. In case of emergency all contents of the hangar bay could be vented into space. They activated the mechanism and the door shut firmly behind them. They relaxed for a second as they felt the pressure reducing. They tried to calm down and breathe normally, but they both had one thing in mind “Payback”. As soon as the door opened on the other side they were treated to a gruesome spectacle. Dead soldiers were floating on the hallway, some simply dead, others burned beyond recognition, and a few with strange markings.

The Covenant had been on board the ship killing any survivors and searching for any useful NavCom data. Without saying a word they both headed to the engineers locker room and suited up with proper space suits. Since they did maintenance on the hull of the ship, their suits were far better designed for precision work and endurance. They argued for what seemed to them a couple of minutes and then decided on an interesting surprise for the Covenant. They went back to the hangar, this time however the pressure of space and the cold were not a nuisance as before. Wright went inside the Scorpion Tank and a few minutes later handed Borges some cables, which he connected to the now silent Dolores. The ship came to life for a couple of seconds in spite of being in a very bad shape, and it started broadcasting an emergency signal. After a while, Borges unplugged the cables and the ship went dead again. He would make sure the covies payed for what had done to her. Wright had managed to get the Tank’s turret working. Borges joined him in the cockpit, which was very tight, as far as he was concerned a Pelican was far cozier than that, but for the moment it had to do. They waited for a target to come into view, any Covenant would suffice, they just wanted revenge. They would even settle for a Banshee or a Seraph, but fortune gave them a big smile when a Covenant Corvette came into view. The god dammed ship had ship was a great and easy target, but it had shields so they had to time it perfectly. Luckily for them timing was their mastery.

They had to wait until the ship charged a plasma round and then fire at the main battery as it was firing it. The ship would drop its shields for a second, if not less, to fire and that was their window of opportunity. If they fired too soon, they were dead. It they fired too late, they might hit the ship, but the plasma round would hit them. They didn’t want to damage the ship. They wanted it sunk. They had to hit the plasma round with the explosion of the shell to ensure that the ship went down for good. A bold and risky strategy. The ship had been lured to the destroyer’s remains by the Pelican’s SOS signal. Dolores last words were not of helplessness and shame, but an angry defying roar.

They stayed still in the Tank's cockpit waiting for any sign from the Covenant ship as it became bigger and bigger. Suddenly Borges spotted a bluish glow near the bow and Wright took aim. This was it. Neither of them spoke a word, they knew what had to be done. The adrenaline that rushed through them made them feel as if time had slowed down. They were gliding again free of electronic commands and assists. Just them, the Tank and the ship. The blue glow started changing in both size and color. They could feel their nerves wrecking, just as they had felt trying to pull the dammed Hornet up. And then amidst all that, Borges saw it, a tiny glimmer on the ship's stern. “Fire!” he shouted, but Wright had already pulled the trigger a fraction of second before he had finished yelling. Wright immediately begun shouting, if he was going to die he might as well do so doing what he loved. Borges, relieved of the stress, looked at Dolores one last time and said “we did it baby”. Then he fainted.

He woke up inside the cell of an ONI Prowler. An Officer explained that they were found due to the distress beacon and that they had managed to sink the Covenant Corvette. They had fallen unconscious due to hypoxia, Wright had not yet regained consciousness. The Officer then left the room and the interrogation begun. It was an endless torture of question after question, they went from basic color recognition, to the assembly of a weapon. From strategical deployment, and flight controls to the events of the battle. From the names of his fellow soldiers, to the names and dates he had graduated. They feared they were spies of some sort, or they simply couldn't believe his story. Truth be told, he couldn't either. Every time the interrogator left the room, another came in. The new one asked the same questions all over again and left, and another one came in. Borges estimated he must have been twelve of fourteen hours being interrogated. For a couple of moments he wished the Covenant had killed him, it was far better than being endlessly interrogated. Finally a man came into the room, he had a different uniform, it was matte black and had no visible insignias. He explained that both him and Wright would remain under surveillance, but for now they chose to believe his story. He also explained that there would not be any decoration not due to the lack of heroism in their actions, but because of the fact that the battle had been a complete massacre for the UNSC, almost thirteen ships had been lost with all hands. The battle was to stay out of the public eye and the Official Communications channels. Just as he was leaving he said the same thing the ONI Officer I the Captain's Briefing Room had said.

Wright couldn't understand what was going through Borges mind, but he could know how he felt about those words. He had asked Borges many times about their rescue after waking up in the Hospital ship, but his answer had always been the same “Classified ONI Directive”, which were the exact words the ONI Officer had told him to repeat. The Officer approached the holomap and gave it a nostalgic look. He took a deep breath and said calmly “Reach has fallen. On August 30, 2552 all remaining UNSC ships were ordered to abandon the planet.”. He had a hard time saying those words and keeping his calm tone, it was the first time he had said it aloud.

Borges and Wright couldn't move. They were frozen in place, unable to act, think or do otherwise. They simply couldn't understand how humanity's biggest military stronghold in the galaxy had fallen in eight days (considering the last Comms entry before the last slipspace jump). The ONI Officer took a moments pause and the continued “Needless to say how dire the war has become. I have orders to take you with me to Earth. Your services, loyalty and secrecy are required.” The man handed them a Datapad and then vanished again in the darkness of the room.


The Captain ordered them to be ready at 0700, since they would be transferred to an ONI Prowler. He saluted them as if Wright and Borges were his superiors and said “Take good care of Earth for me boys, make me proud!”. They nodded in silent respect and left the room. The walk towards the hangar was silent, neither of them was bold enough to say a word. It was too much to take in, too much to bear. They both tried to remember the names of any acquaintances stationed in Reach, but came out empty handed. They couldn't even remember the planet's landscape or the space port, or even the fancy bars in New Alexandria. It was as if it had been ripped from their memories. They both knew they couldn't let that happen to earth, they couldn't let that happen to humanity. And they wouldn't.