Sven Alfredsson's internal chronometer beeped, timing the mission progress.
He looked about with some justifiable satisfaction at Team Matthew; they'd
made excellent time in cutting through the outer filter mesh and penetrating
the maintenance shafts, and now were barely an hour away from their final
objective.
"OK team, let's rest up a bit here," he ordered. The camera in
this old maintenance room had been bypassed, continually replaying the
loop of an empty room, so his team could take a bit of a break for food
and water. The genejack factory was at the very basement of The Leader's
Horde, and so they'd had a long descent. This was as close as they
were going to get.
As the rest of the team talked quietly amongst themselves, or prayed,
Sven beckoned Ari Danko over. Danko was a Free Drone, formerly specializing
in water and sewer maintenance. His role had been specifically assigned
by Sven.
"So, is this it Ari?" Sven asked Danko as he brought out a holotablet.
"Yes, Brother Sven. We can go into the regular corridors at this
point, and make our way to the nearest recycling pump processing station
here. Then we open the water hatch and should be able to get all
the way to the genejack factory through the water pipeline."
"If everything goes according to plan, that is," Sven mused.
"If God is with us, how can it not?" Danko asked.
"Well Ari, my experience is that God helps, but he expects us to do
our part. Sometimes that means dealing with things when they go wrong."
Sven answered, before turning to the others.
"Let's go, people. We've got work to do."
As it turned out, Danko was right - but so was Sven. The probe
team proceeded down the empty corridors without incident before reaching
the pump control station. To Sven's initial surprise, there was a
high security lock on the control room hatch, but on reflection he realized
it made sense. Every Hiverian citizen lived in deadly fear of flooding,
after all. Not that drowning out the base was their objective, and
besides, to achieve that would've required controlling all six stations.
"Maxine - deal with the lock."
One of the two security systems experts came forward and knelt before
the door. Although secure by Hiverian standards, the lock was nothing
compared to the Morganic technology the Believing Drones had access to.
A small aerosol can came out, and hundreds of specialized nanites were
sprayed onto the lock. Thirty seconds later, the door was unlocked.
Sven signalled his team to activate stealth and position themselves
on either side of the door, before he yanked it open.
"Damn," he swore. A very surprised maintenance worker stared at
the apparently empty doorway, his mouth open in confusion.
"Sorry," Sven muttered, and shot the drone through the skull with an
X-ray laser. The worker fell backwards without a cry.
May God have mercy on your soul, Sven thought as he entered the
room first, his laser swinging to either side quickly.
"Clear!" he messaged to his team, and they filed in and shut the door.
Danko immediately raced to the waterworks hatch and began to undog it.
"Sir!" Maxine hissed, and pointed, temporarily forgetting that none
of them could see each other. Sven saw it in a moment himself, though
- one of the omnipresent cameras, niched in a corner. The old-fashioned
charge-coupled device optics wouldn't have registered the team members
themselves, but the camera would've definitely witnessed the door's opening,
and the collapse of the luckless maintenance drone. Sven still had
enough blood in him to feel it run cold.
"Judges 1-4," he ordered his team grimly. They still had a chance
to get out alive, but it'd take some luck, and the battle-hardened cyborg
hated
relying on luck.
Twelve levels up, and barely five minutes previous, Angel swore with
vile intensity, massaging her temples. She still had a splitting
headache from Ashaandi's fiasco with the enemy empaths. Before the
psi-link broke, she could feel a number of the Circle turning to this Catherine
Atreus. Only her own considerable mental talents had sufficed to
keep her free. Plus, the fact that she was a self-celebrated psychopathic
deviant; ironically, that very psychosis had protected her from the massmind
the others had succumbed to. Ashaandi was also still free of course,
plus a few of his most dedicated and capable disciples - but the Circle
was broken, and Angel felt a strange new emotion - fear. For the
first time in her long life, Angel's confidence was shaken, and she felt
an almost desperate need to assert herself.
A light blinked on the console before her, indicating an urgent message
from one of her underlings. Although the Circle had just suffered
a mass defection of its psi talents, Ashaandi had had the foresight to
recruit a number of non-psionic talented and ambitious individuals as well.
Although they were considered cannon fodder by the psis, at least they
knew that they would enjoy positions of privilege over the rest of the
common herd when the Circle reigned supreme. Most of these agents
were recruited from, indeed frequently comprised the rank-and-file of the
Hive's covert ops teams. They would be doubly valuable after the recent
events, but right now Angel was still in a foul temper. She slapped
the commlink control.
"What!"
The caller, Lieutenant Norris, couldn't help but flinch as Angel appeared
before him, her face twisted with barely-controlled rage, looking more
like some terrible demon then the mythological creature whose name she
bore. Rumour had it that the sisters were born of Believer parents,
and had in some strange twist of psychology sought to become the antithesis
of what they'd once been taught to be. Whatever their history, however,
Angel terrified Norris, and he spoke quickly to deflect her ire.
"Ma'am... our link to the police headquarters just picked this up,"
he said and without prompting replied the video record. Angel watched
with interest, laughing briefly as the maintenance drone fell backwards
with a circular hole burnt into his head. However she didn't fail
to note the distinct absence of an attacker. Obviously, someone was
using a stealth suit. No doubt the Morganites.
"The police?" Angel asked, even as she began strapping on her own probe
ops equipment.
"They're on their way, but...." Norris was intelligent enough
to know the police would find nothing; while capable of keeping the drones
in line, they certainly weren't trained for counterespionage.
"Assemble the team and meet me at the security elevator."
Angel briefly wondered what these Morganites were up to, but it didn't
really matter to her. What mattered was that she was going to have
some toys to play with soon, to keep her mind off more disturbing matters.
The elevator door ahead of Sven opened, and two Hiverian police troopers
moved out in full synthemetal SWAT gear, their weapons sweeping back and
forth to cover the hallway. Seeing nothing, they advanced forward,
and the elevator disgorged another dozen fully-armoured troopers.
The last one in line moved forward with his fellows before suddenly crying
out and pitching forward onto his front. Within a quarter of a second,
four more of the police were also dead, and the remaining troopers threw
themselves to the ground, looking for their assailants. They saw
none - the high-powered X-ray laser was both silent and invisible to the
naked eye, and Sven Alfredsson smiled grimly as he depressed the trigger
of his weapon yet again. Unlike for the drone worker previous, Sven
held no regrets; the Mental Hygiene Police were amongst the worst specimens
of humanity the Hive had ever produced - discounting the Circle, of course.
The Free Drone members of his team likely felt the same way; in any
event, they were trained and professional, and several other police died
in seconds. The others, although still in confusion, reacted instinctively,
spraying shredder fire all around them. Sven heard one of his team
cry out - although everyone was prone, still the ricochets could be deadly.
There were only five troopers left, now, and Sven switched to his shredder
pistol. The muzzle blazed; the shredder wasn't as covert as the laser,
but it also didn't require seven tenths of a second to recharge, either;
and then there were no more enemy troopers, just five dead bodies.
"Who got hit?" Sven snapped out.
"Me, sir - Ari Danko." The answer was a tight whisper of pain,
and Danko deactivated his stealth suit so that Sven could examine him.
It didn't take long; Sven could see the lacerations across Danko's gut,
and the blood leaking out of his light body armour. In a proper medical
facility, those wounds would not be life-threatening. In this situation,
the former drone was as good as dead. Sven owed it to his team members
to give them the truth, and he shook his head grimly.
"I'm sorry, Ari."
"That's... that's all right, sir. We knew the risks when we signed
up. I may walk through the valley of death tonight, but the Lord
is my shepherd. And I can still take some of the bastards with me
when they get down here, and be of use to the team."
Sven nodded as he administered painkillers.
"Go in peace, Brother Ari."
One by one, the other team members touched Ari on the shoulder, but
only briefly; time was of the essence and already the lift was descending
again.
"Here's the plan, group. This time we let them come down the hall
- Ari will occupy their attention, and we will hit them from behind, then
go up the shaft ourselves. Maxine - you'll override the elevator
controls. Jeff, Glen, you'll get off at the port level; Suet, you
and Maxine will get off at sublevel one. Akira, you and I will go
all the way to the top. Everyone will make their best way back to
the rendezvous as originally planned."
The lift arrived, and the Believing Drones flattened to either side
of the corridor again.
"Fire on my command," Sven said, as the doors opened.
Four Hive troopers came out, and as they did, Sven knew his team was
in trouble. Unlike the police, these were part of the base garrison,
and their fusion-assisted plasma steel armour was six times as heavy as
the police infantry had worn. Plus they carried Hive-standard military
chaos carbines, which were far more dangerous than the simple shredder
hand weapons the police had. And they knew their business, advancing
in a skirmish line as another four troopers emerged, then another again.
A final group of four took up position as a rearguard at the elevator entrance.
"Change of plan," Sven sub-vocalized, and the piezoelectric sensor on
his throat translated the commands clearly to the earbugs of the probe
operatives. "These guys are too well trained and equipped.
Instead, we'll...."
Sven never got a chance to finish his sentence, as a burst of shredder
fire erupted from the back of the elevator, and there was a sudden explosion
of gore where Jeff had been crouching. The stealthsuit obviously
still was working, but a spreading pool of blood marked where the body
lay.
Sven swore; but the cyborg's combat reflexes were already reacting,
throwing his body to the side as a burst of shards tore into the wall where
he'd been standing, even as his mind put together the pieces. Enemy
probe team, he thought. Using the troops to draw our attention
- smart. They've obviously equipped with stealth too. But how
did they just locate us? No sensors here, and we weren't moving...
damn. They've got an empath.
"Fire!" Sven ordered. It wouldn't help much - the troopers
were too heavily armoured for any of his team - except himself, of course
- to seriously degrade. And they still couldn't see the Hiverian
probe members. But that at least beat being picked off by the opposition.
And if they could see him and not vice-versa, he had to even the odds somehow.
He could see that the nearest trooper carried an ECM jammer; for a moment
he wondered why they hadn't been deployed, then realized that the enemy
probe team commander preferred both groups remain stealthed. It made
sense, since they had the empath, even if their regular troopers weren't
doing much good.
Sven made a split-second decision even as he acted. Team Mark
was still out there, and there was no way Matthew could get out of this
now. But at least they could improve the odds for Sister Jessica.
He reached forward, and his shredder - powered off his internal powerpack,
not batteries - flashed barely an inch in front of an unfortunate trooper's
helmet. The man didn't even have a chance to flinch before his skull
was a grey mist. With his other hand, Sven reached down and grabbed
the ECM jammer grenade, activating it. A burst of EMP washed over
the corridor. In a moment, the remaining members of Team Mark began
to flicker into existence - even Spartan combat stealthsuits couldn't resist
a burst at such close range - but so did seven other figures.
"Drop your weapons!" Angel ordered, but even as she spoke, her
mind issued a powerful mental command to the nearest opponent to force
him to comply.
A mighty fortress is our God...
The mental statement - along with an unyielding mental resistance -
came back over her psi-link, and Angel recoiled briefly. Not Morganites
after all. Believers. Angel knew from experience that mind
control of Miriam's fanatics was virtually impossible - they were brainwashed
far more effectively than even Yang's drones, and unlike the drones, had
an inherent resistance derived from their ideology. Symbols were
the key to telepathy, and the Believers in particular were apt to frame
their symbols into hard, unyielding imagery like shields and fortresses.
She could still scan them, of course, and....
"Sven Alfredsson." Her sudden recognition was spoken with a rich,
languid appreciation.
"Angel." The cyborg replied, and even though the troopers had
oriented their weapons towards him, it was as if only the two of them existed
at this moment.
The worst, save perhaps Sand or Ashaandi, Sven thought to himself.
That's right, Sven my darling, Angel laughed mentally as she
forced her way into his mind. I wonder why you're still here with
your brain intact. I wonder just what dear Kurt's been up to.
I'm going to have such fun finding out. And I will find
out. I can read you like an open book.
Then you'd better learn to speed-read, Sven retorted, and with
electronic reflexes, his shredder aligned and his finger squeezed.
Several things happened in quick succession, at the speed of thought.
Angel could read the cyborg's intentions even as he acted, and a sudden
lance of debilitating mental paralysis hit the cyborg. His mind still
worked, but suddenly his synapses couldn't respond.
But his body could. Months previous, after meeting Kurt, getting
his memory back, Sven had sworn that he'd never fall into the hands of
the Circle again. Not alive, at any rate. And so he'd carefully
crafted a hard-wired program into his cybernetic control system.
One command. A very simple one, and Angel's psi attack had no effect
on the small piece of silicon that issued it. Even if Sven had wanted
to, he couldn't override the command. That was the whole point.
It wasn't under his control, so it couldn't be under hers either.
The finger squeezed, and hyper-accelerated superdense shards of plasma
steel tore into Angel's body.
Angel screamed with a pain she'd never felt, though frequently inflicted,
as she could feel her legs - her beautiful legs - sliced up. She
was lucky, though - the cyborg's aim had been low.
Sven smiled an extremely unpleasant smile as Angel fell. She wasn't
dead, though - suddenly three of the Hiverian troopers and two of Angel's
probe team threw themselves into the line of fire, shock at their own actions
still on their faces. The empath was instinctively defending herself,
even though it meant sacrificing her allies like the peons she thought
of them as. Others dragged her back into the lift, the heavy security
doors closing. She always was a self-centred b*tch, Sven thought,
and his reflexes came back under his control. Chaos weaponry chewed
into his body, and almost as an afterthought, he shut down all his pain
receptors, even as he returned fire. Oh yes, there also was one other
thing he needed to do. He keyed in his MMI, instructing it to send
an encrypted message burst to Sister Jessica's private frequency.
Probe team compromised, but enemy probe team neutralized. Good
luck, and God speed.
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