“Go.”
Kurt held back. Not from any fear of jumping, but it was so irrevocable. There was no going back if he jumped. Maybe this would lose him Shauna forever.
But it was for a greater good, of that he was convinced.
'Into the lion’s mouth,' he thought.
“Go. Go” asserted the crewman.
Kurt launched himself.
The needlejet had come in low at the 2000 meter level, just clearing the canyon ridge, and as the ground fell away into the canyon bottom spread out before him the crewman had ordered the jump.
Now Kurt floated gently down into the bowels of Nessus Canyon, to the secret headquarters of the Circle of Ashaandi.
As he descended, he focussed his senses and shaped them into a probe as his training had taught. A tight, hard beam. He swept the canyon floor and walls.
They’re good, he thought. His probe was met with absolute blankness. Not even chittering mindworms lived here in this harsh environment. He increased his power, and swept again. Faint wisps of sentience emanating from the gently swaying fungus stalks rippling in the breezes caressing the canyon sides. But that was all.
As his feet touched the canyon floor he rolled to one side, standing up in one movement and deftly pulling his chute in towards him as he did so.
“Cover your tracks,” Sand had said. “Anyone flying over your landing area five minutes later must be totally unaware that the surface has been even touched.”
He stuffed the chute into the almost empty backpack he wore. A bottle of water and a handful of boiled detoxed fungus stalks was his provisions – “live off the land,” Sand had said. He had a handful of water purification tablets, but didn’t reckon he’d need them. He hadn’t seen any water.
“Your mission is to find the ops center. If you succeed, you will find it. If you fail, you will die in the canyon. It’s as simple as that,” Sand had said ominously.
“Will they be making it easy for me?” he’d asked, naively.
“On the contrary,” Sand had responded. “They have orders to kill you. We’ve alerted them that a Spartan operative has broken our code and has infiltrated the Circle. You will succeed if you can convince them that you are genuine. If you cannot, you will die.”
'Good job I flunked math,' Kurt thought. 'There’s a lot of death possibility on one side and only wits and good planning on the other.'
Well, he was a survivor.
He adjusted his breather. It had been so long since he’d used one constantly that it now felt uncomfortable. Around the bases, where every building had piped oxygen, nowhere was more than five minutes form clean breathable air. Even outside the base perimeters, in the forests and the farms, the air was regenerating with a healthy to humans mix, as it was around the sea and ocean shores. After 125 years on Planet some healthy rainforests had developed and were now oxygen generators.
But here, in the stifling heat of the floor of Nessus Canyon, the natural air was almost unbreatheable for all but the shortest spell.
Kurt took stock of his surroundings.
He’d snuck a peek at the pilot’s map, and although he couldn’t read the aviation map, he could read the pilot’s mind. “Use every advantage you have,” Sand had said. “There’s no such thing as ‘cheating’ in this test. You are gambling with your life.”
So he had read the map through the pilot’s eyes.
He was at co-ordinate 4/100.
Immediately to the south was a fungal field.
In a sweep from the northeast to due west was arid desert soil, forming the barrier that protected the canyon floor.
To the southwest, southeast, east and northeast was desert scrub, warmed by the sun, but protected in the shadow of the dunes to the north and west.
‘If I were building a base where would I site it?’ Kurt thought.
‘In the fungus!’
He headed south.
Kurt wandered for days in the fungus. It felt, looked and even smelt different here. Kurt wondered about that.
Most of the fungus he’d encountered had been Planet’s equivalent of ‘lush.’ It had been by ocean or close to ocean, and certainly flourished under rainfall just as well as terran plants. But this was different. It looked almost burnt, almost dead.
He took off a mitt, and reached out to touch one of the brittle looking tendrils.
earthkurt…join us in our sorrow…yet rejoice with us in the joining of planet and earthkind.
Disorientation……..
Dissonance…….
Kurt sat down heavily in the fungus and let the waves of sorrow wash over him.
The needless loss of life.
The wasting of young lives, cut off before they could contribute much to the collective consciousness…of old, complete lives yet with still so much to offer…tinged with exhuberance that they had joined in the collective consciousness in their death…that they were finally complete.
Kurt stretched his neural perception, and as he reached, scanning, he began to pick up wisps of consciousnesses, of personalities. Those that were strongest seemed to have an almost lifelike pattern whereas the weaker ones were more dissonant, more disjointed.
One in particular stood out, attracting Kurt’s thought tendrils as they roamed over the collective sentience.
earthkurt, beware….all is not what it seems…..
voice….are you planet?
earthkurt….we are with planet now …we are one with planet…but once I walked on planet….
Voice, …who are you…what can you tell me?
earthkurt…I was once known as earthburge …a mighty general with the spartans
but you can’t be dead…..you are still commanding their armies…
an imposter,,,earthkurt…ashaandi impersonating me…all is not what it seems….trust not earthsand…he spells deceit….I thought him dead, but he is not here…nor his accomplice…earthangel…beware her beauty..there is a beast within…
Field Marshall Burge…I will be joining you soon if I cannot find my way around here…can you help?
…we cannot see…only experience earthkurt through planet…you are close…we sense that…beware…
Kurt woke up with a start, shivering. The suns were long since down, and Nessus' pale, reflected light had no warmth. The valley floor was cold, yet the fungus strangely warm and comforting.
‘What a dream,’ Kurt thought. ‘Imagining I was speaking to the dead. Harrumph.’
He sat up in the fungal bed, and started, as he was staring down the barrel of a shard pistolette.
Behind the shard gun was a beautiful, classically sculpted face, framed by short cropped blond hair that cupped down to her ears on either side.
“Don’t move,” said the apparition. “you have some talking to do.”
As she spoke, she was motioning with the pistol for Kurt to get up.
He was mesmerized by the pistol.
Or more correctly by the hand holding it.
Wearing a glove.
Encrusted with flecks of diamonds.
[This message has been edited by Googlie (edited November 12, 1999).]
Kurt held back. Not from any fear of jumping, but it was so irrevocable. There was no going back if he jumped. Maybe this would lose him Shauna forever.
But it was for a greater good, of that he was convinced.
'Into the lion’s mouth,' he thought.
“Go. Go” asserted the crewman.
Kurt launched himself.
The needlejet had come in low at the 2000 meter level, just clearing the canyon ridge, and as the ground fell away into the canyon bottom spread out before him the crewman had ordered the jump.
Now Kurt floated gently down into the bowels of Nessus Canyon, to the secret headquarters of the Circle of Ashaandi.
As he descended, he focussed his senses and shaped them into a probe as his training had taught. A tight, hard beam. He swept the canyon floor and walls.
They’re good, he thought. His probe was met with absolute blankness. Not even chittering mindworms lived here in this harsh environment. He increased his power, and swept again. Faint wisps of sentience emanating from the gently swaying fungus stalks rippling in the breezes caressing the canyon sides. But that was all.
As his feet touched the canyon floor he rolled to one side, standing up in one movement and deftly pulling his chute in towards him as he did so.
“Cover your tracks,” Sand had said. “Anyone flying over your landing area five minutes later must be totally unaware that the surface has been even touched.”
He stuffed the chute into the almost empty backpack he wore. A bottle of water and a handful of boiled detoxed fungus stalks was his provisions – “live off the land,” Sand had said. He had a handful of water purification tablets, but didn’t reckon he’d need them. He hadn’t seen any water.
“Your mission is to find the ops center. If you succeed, you will find it. If you fail, you will die in the canyon. It’s as simple as that,” Sand had said ominously.
“Will they be making it easy for me?” he’d asked, naively.
“On the contrary,” Sand had responded. “They have orders to kill you. We’ve alerted them that a Spartan operative has broken our code and has infiltrated the Circle. You will succeed if you can convince them that you are genuine. If you cannot, you will die.”
'Good job I flunked math,' Kurt thought. 'There’s a lot of death possibility on one side and only wits and good planning on the other.'
Well, he was a survivor.
He adjusted his breather. It had been so long since he’d used one constantly that it now felt uncomfortable. Around the bases, where every building had piped oxygen, nowhere was more than five minutes form clean breathable air. Even outside the base perimeters, in the forests and the farms, the air was regenerating with a healthy to humans mix, as it was around the sea and ocean shores. After 125 years on Planet some healthy rainforests had developed and were now oxygen generators.
But here, in the stifling heat of the floor of Nessus Canyon, the natural air was almost unbreatheable for all but the shortest spell.
Kurt took stock of his surroundings.
He’d snuck a peek at the pilot’s map, and although he couldn’t read the aviation map, he could read the pilot’s mind. “Use every advantage you have,” Sand had said. “There’s no such thing as ‘cheating’ in this test. You are gambling with your life.”
So he had read the map through the pilot’s eyes.
He was at co-ordinate 4/100.
Immediately to the south was a fungal field.
In a sweep from the northeast to due west was arid desert soil, forming the barrier that protected the canyon floor.
To the southwest, southeast, east and northeast was desert scrub, warmed by the sun, but protected in the shadow of the dunes to the north and west.
‘If I were building a base where would I site it?’ Kurt thought.
‘In the fungus!’
He headed south.
Kurt wandered for days in the fungus. It felt, looked and even smelt different here. Kurt wondered about that.
Most of the fungus he’d encountered had been Planet’s equivalent of ‘lush.’ It had been by ocean or close to ocean, and certainly flourished under rainfall just as well as terran plants. But this was different. It looked almost burnt, almost dead.
He took off a mitt, and reached out to touch one of the brittle looking tendrils.
earthkurt…join us in our sorrow…yet rejoice with us in the joining of planet and earthkind.
Disorientation……..
Dissonance…….
Kurt sat down heavily in the fungus and let the waves of sorrow wash over him.
The needless loss of life.
The wasting of young lives, cut off before they could contribute much to the collective consciousness…of old, complete lives yet with still so much to offer…tinged with exhuberance that they had joined in the collective consciousness in their death…that they were finally complete.
Kurt stretched his neural perception, and as he reached, scanning, he began to pick up wisps of consciousnesses, of personalities. Those that were strongest seemed to have an almost lifelike pattern whereas the weaker ones were more dissonant, more disjointed.
One in particular stood out, attracting Kurt’s thought tendrils as they roamed over the collective sentience.
earthkurt, beware….all is not what it seems…..
voice….are you planet?
earthkurt….we are with planet now …we are one with planet…but once I walked on planet….
Voice, …who are you…what can you tell me?
earthkurt…I was once known as earthburge …a mighty general with the spartans
but you can’t be dead…..you are still commanding their armies…
an imposter,,,earthkurt…ashaandi impersonating me…all is not what it seems….trust not earthsand…he spells deceit….I thought him dead, but he is not here…nor his accomplice…earthangel…beware her beauty..there is a beast within…
Field Marshall Burge…I will be joining you soon if I cannot find my way around here…can you help?
…we cannot see…only experience earthkurt through planet…you are close…we sense that…beware…
Kurt woke up with a start, shivering. The suns were long since down, and Nessus' pale, reflected light had no warmth. The valley floor was cold, yet the fungus strangely warm and comforting.
‘What a dream,’ Kurt thought. ‘Imagining I was speaking to the dead. Harrumph.’
He sat up in the fungal bed, and started, as he was staring down the barrel of a shard pistolette.
Behind the shard gun was a beautiful, classically sculpted face, framed by short cropped blond hair that cupped down to her ears on either side.
“Don’t move,” said the apparition. “you have some talking to do.”
As she spoke, she was motioning with the pistol for Kurt to get up.
He was mesmerized by the pistol.
Or more correctly by the hand holding it.
Wearing a glove.
Encrusted with flecks of diamonds.
[This message has been edited by Googlie (edited November 12, 1999).]
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