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Manxome Foe: Chapter One
Last updated: Saturday, September 15, 2007 16:41 EDT
Id only do this for Mom, you know.
Sergeant Eric Bergstresser adjusted the high collar of the Marine Dress Blues and shrugged his shoulders, again, trying to get the uniform to feel right. But since he spent most of his time in Mar-Cam or jeans, it never quite did.
Youve skipped out of it the last two visits, bro, Joshua Bergstresser said, shrugging. Josh, just turned sixteen and decidedly civilian given the earring he was sporting, was wearing Dockers and a polo shirt, as dressed up as he was going to get for church. Besides, you look good. Youre going to attract the ladies like flypaper. Maybe I should get a set of those.
Eric winced and then shrugged.
Dont do it unless youre sure, Eric said, frowning. As long as youre not in my outfit, Mom probably wont get two telegrams.
Not a good way to talk, bro, Josh said. Youll be fine. Tell me youll be fine.
Aint gonna lie, bro, Eric replied. Not something I can talk about. But I will tell you that on my last mission, we went out with forty-one Marines and landed with five.
Are you serious? Josh said, angrily. That never made the news!
Yes, it did, Eric said, one cheek twitching up in an ironic smile. Thirty-six Marines killed in helicopter crash. News at Six.
That was out west somewhere, Josh replied, furrowing his brow thoughtfully. That was your unit? Eric, crashes, well
There wasnt a crash, Eric said, chuckling grimly. They all died in combat. But a helicopter crash was a convenient cover. Among other things, it explained that most of them were closed casket funerals. Hell, there werent even bodies in most of the caskets, just sandbags. We didnt lose them all at once and quite a few werent recoverable.
And that was your unit? Josh asked.
Yep.
And youre going back?
Yep.
Thats insane.
Yep.
Eric, Josh said, desperately. You cannot go do whatever it is you do, again. Forget what I said about the uniform. De-volunteer or something. Hell, Ill hide you under my bed. With casualties like that
Not much chance of believing Ill survive, right? Eric asked, finally turning away from the mirror.
YES!
Believe it or not, on the last cruise I started to get into Goth and heavy metal, Eric said, talking around the point.
And I was happy, happy, happy, Josh replied. Since I no longer had to listen to Hank Williams Junior. Whats it got to do with the statistical certainty youre going to die?
I still listen to Hank, Eric said. But one of the songs I got into was called Winterborn. Youve never heard of Cruxshadows, have you?
Bit indy for me, man, Josh said. Whats wrong with Metallica?
Besides that they havent had an album out in ten years? Eric replied. But this song, its about the Trojans. Theres a line in the chorus: In the fury of this darkest hour, I will be your light. Youve asked me for my sacrifice, and I am Winterborn. Im good at what I do, Josh. Very good.
I didnt figure you got the Navy Cross for being incompetent, Josh said, quietly. But theres these things called odds.
And if I didnt do it, somebody else would have to, Eric continued as if he hadnt heard his brother. From experience, probably somebody who wasnt as good, who has less of a chance of coming back. You want me to put them on the chopping block, bro?
Hell, yes! Josh said, his jaw working. Theyre not my brother!
Theyre somebodys brother, the sergeant said, picking up his cover. They were brothers and sons. Some lady just like Mom carried them in her womb and nursed them and loved them. And most of them we couldnt even bring home. There wasnt anything to bring. Ive got a better chance than any replacement. He tucked his cover under his arm and nodded at his reflection, curtly. So, this is my sacrifice. As my First Sergeant once said, if I was worried about where I was going to die, I never should have joined the Marines in the first place.
Commander William Weaver, PhD, topped out on the latest ///climb and stood up on the pedals clutching the saddle between his thighs as he coasted downwards over the crest of the hill, catching his breath. The roots on the trail were still slick from the morning dew that had yet to be burned off by the mid morning Alabama sun. The canopy of oak trees and the dense green foliage around the trail would prevent that for several more hours. The rear wheel spinning and slipping on the roots had made the climbs more difficult than Bill was hoping and he was getting totally worked. Leaning his center of gravity behind the saddle as the screaming downhill rushed up at him he managed to keep his heart from exploding in his chest just long enough to hop the mountain bike over the small oak tree that had been cut down across the trail to prevent it from washing. Bill looked at his heartrate monitor on the center of the handlebars 185. He was working extremely too hard for this part of the trail. The ride was fun and had let him take his mind off of, well, off of a lot of things, but his heart just wasnt really in it. The climb on the other side of the screaming downhill had severely kicked his ass. He should be able to recover his heartrate back down to at lest the 160s, but it was dropping slowly and his heart pounded like a base drum in his throat. He felt so out of shape. Eight years ago he would have kicked this rides butt and been up for another lap or maybe two, but eight years ago was eight years ago. And the ride back up the mountain to the parking lot was going to be hell.///
Eight years ago was when hed put his ass on the line to save the world. Eight years ago was before there was any concept of the Vorpal Blade. Eight years ago was eight years ago when the world was a relatively simple place and a little slope like that last one wouldnt have bothered him one bit.
Eight years ago hed been working for a defense contractor, fixing problems for the military and other government agencies with acronyms, mostly ending in A. DIA, CIA, NSA. Then an explosion blew up the University of Central Florida physics lab, and the rest of the university. Two hundred fifty one times ten to the twelth power joules would do that. Call it sixty megatons and be done.
Subsequent to the blast that flattened UCF and a goodly space around it hed been blasted into other dimensions, died he was pretty sure, resurrected he was absolutely sure and generally had a hell of a time running around saving the planet. The blast had opened up gates to other worlds, some of them inhabited by hostiles with seriously negative intent. Called the Dreen they consumed organic matter to create more copies of themselves. They had conquered multiple worlds and Earth was next on the list. Weaver, with the help of a SEAL master chief and sundry others had managed to close the gates the Dreen used. But the anomaly where UCF Physics Department used to be kept pumping out more gates.
In time Weaver, among others, had figured out how to create gates on earth, shutting down the Gate Forming Bosons that were the culprits. Instantaneous teleportation from point to point was now a reality, with more and more gates being opened every day. The now defunct airlines had been less than thrilled. In ten years it was getting to the point that auto makers were less than thrilled.
The Dreen were not the only alien species encountered. One of their subject races, the cat-like Mree, had pretended to be friends just long enough to scout out the new human prey. The destruction of the Dreen gates had almost certainly wiped out the Mree as well. Contact with them had certainly been cut off. But the survivor Mree, part of the Dreen invasion force, had been less upset about that than many expected. They were a proud race that had seen themselves fall into slavery to masters who took not only their planets resources but the very bodies of their citizens for conversion into Dreen. A clean death at the hands of an honorable foe was preferable.
One friendly race had been encountered, as well. The Adar were in advance of humans technologically but had nearly as much trouble with the Dreen. It was the Adar, though, who had passed on two items. One was a bomb big enough to shut down the Dreen gates. They hadnt used it because the only way to crack the gates was for the bomb to go off very close to one. If it went off on the wrong side the planet wasnt going to be habitable. The humans were desperate enough to use it and it worked, shutting down not only the gate that it was sent through but all other Dreen gates.
The second device, though, was in a way more useful. The Adar had found it on an ancient planet whose sun was just about dead. Nothing more than an enigmatic black box the size of a deck of cards, it had surprising properties. Any electrical charge caused it to release orders of magnitude more energy than inputted. Weaver eventually guessed that it was a warp drive and he was right. ///Or at least the warp drive had been one of the boxs functions if not its primary one. ///
Using the box, which was not only a warp generator but a reactionless drive generator, the US government had converted a submarine, the USS Nebraska, into a space ship. It had taken seven years and Weaver had jumped ship into the Navy early in the process. One of the problems with the hill, admittedly, had been too much time in a swivel chair redesigning a submarine to go where no man had gone before.
But Weaver, and a team of thousands, had eventually done it. And then Weaver, acting as astrogator, had gone out with the rechristened Vorpal Blade. Humans, seeing the first mirror-like gates, had christened them Looking Glasses. The Adar found human thought process fascinating and had insisted that this ship be named in accordance with that thought. Since the ship was an Alliance space ship, theyd had enough pull to push the name through.
Unfortunately, the Adar, while fine scientists and philosophers, had very little understanding of human humor or thought processes. So the name acronym for Alliance Space Ship had slipped past their filters before it was too late.
On the ASS Vorpal Blade, Weaver, a crew of one hundred and fifty four officers, NCOs and enlisted, forty-one Marines and a handful of scientists had ventured forth on a local survey. They had limped back with five Marines, a couple of scientists and a hundred and twenty crew. But theyd found out what they were sent to find out: Space may be an unforgiving Bitch but She was nothing compared to landings. On the other hand, theyd also found allies and some interesting technology.
On a moon of a gas giant circling the otherwise unremarkable star 61 Cygni Alpha theyd encountered a race of rodent-like mammaloids. Named the Cheerick in the language of the country the Vorpal Blade contacted, they were similar in form to chinchillas or hamsters and at their highest level of technology were about at War of the Roses level. Theyd just started to press the edges of real science in other words, climbing out of the darkness of alchemy. However, they also had records dating back thousands of years that indicated that from time to time, for reasons unknown, another race would rise up and destroy them. Dubbed The Demons they had begun to show up shortly before the arrival of the Vorpal Blade. The Blade had, fortunately, been forty light years away at the time of their first sighting so it was innocent.
Eventually, through about half of their casualties, the scientists of the Blade had determined that the Demons were some sort of biological defense mechanism that targeted electrical emissions. By that time, the majority of the science team and a goodly number of Marines had bought the farm. But before they died, the science team had gotten a lock on the source of the demons.
It was left to Weaver, Chief Warrant Officer Miller, USN, a handful of local Royal Guardsmen and a small team of the remaining Marines to stop the scourge. Fortunately, theyd been accompanied by the ships linguist, Miriam Moon. Normally as nervous as a rabbit, Miss Moon had been the person who figured out how the system worked and, using a local, shut it down.
While Weaver was away on his forlorn hope, though, the ship had been under attack. Most of the Demons were ground mounted but there was an aerospace component as well, giant red and blue dragonflies with a very fast reactionless drive system and lasers that shot out of compound eyes. The Blade had been chased into space by them and ripped very nearly to shreds. The local who had taken control of the system, Lady Che-Chee, had had to tow the ship back to the planet using the same flies that had ravaged it.
Enough repairs had been enacted to allow the ship to limp back to earth but making it spaceworthy again had been a half year process. Weaver had acted as the ships Executive Officer on the trip back but gratefully turned over the job on arrival to a more experienced officer. Since then, though, hed been deeply involved in the repairs and upgrades. Like, pretty constant sixteen hour days involved.
This was his first real break, since the major repairs were completed and all that was left was details. Hed grabbed at the new COs suggestion, more like order, to take some leave. The ship wasnt due to leave for its next mission for two months. So hed headed down to his real home in Huntsville to visit friends and reacquaint himself with /// the trails, baby head sized rocks, roots, boulders, downed trees, screaming downhills, and extremely rough and technical climbs of Monte Sano/// Mountain.
He /// pulled his left foot out of the pedal and planted it as he ///braked at a sharp curve and dip ///just before the whoopdie-doos and at about the same time/// his cell phone rang. ///The cell phones ring Welcome to the Jungle by GunsnRoses was barely audible over his pounding heartbeat. Bill almost welcomed the break even though it might mean his ride was over. He bit the tube hanging from the helmet strap in front of his face and sucked down water from his Camelbak between gasps for air. ///
Despite the fact that he was on leave, he was required to be on call. Since he not only had a deeper grasp of the science behind the drive, what was understood, but a knowledge of every bolt and system in the ship that was unsurpassed by even its commander sometimes there were questions that only he could answer. And it appeared that there was another one.
Weaver, he said panting for breath, the earbud he was wearing automatically activating at his voice.
Commander Weaver, Captain Jeller, SpacComOps. Youre required to report at the earliest possible moment to your ship.
Shit, Bill muttered. Uniform?
Whatever youre wearing at the moment, Commander, the captain on the phone said. There has been an incident
Eric tuned out the priest as the sermon started. It was a new one since hed left for the Corps, a woman of all things. His family was Episcopal but while Eric had heard there were no atheists in foxholes, he didnt recall praying much on the last mission. Mostly hed been too scared spitless to remember any.
He spent most of the sermon checking out the congregation. It was pretty much the same faces hed seen most of his life. He was born in Fayettevill, NC when his dad was still in the Army, a leg who did something in logistics Eric had never quite understood. But Eric didnt remember North Carolina as a kid. His dad had moved to Crab Orchard to work in the, then new, plastic plant as a dispatcher. Josh had been born in the Arh Beckley Hospital as had his sister Janna.
Most of the people in the church had been born in Arh Beckley, those that hadnt used a midwife. And hed seen the same faces every Sunday for as long as he could remember. So was it his eyes that had changed or the people around him?
Coach Radner had been a nightmare during high school. The head coach for the Phys Ed department and the lead coach for the Crab Orchard High School football team, the former paratrooper was missing two middle fingers from some industrial accident back in time. One time Bob Arnold had mocked him as the coach was instructing him on the fine point of the three-point stance of a blocker. Bob, thinking he was being funny, had taken up a three point stance with those same fingers folded back as if theyd been cut off. Radner, half Arnolds weight, had knocked the tackle flat on his ass with that same damaged hand. You did not cross Coach Radner.
Looking at him now, Eric saw a man who was relatively out of shape and on the back side of fifty. He looked satisfied with his life but not the demon that Eric recalled.
Bob Arnold was in the audience, too, with his wife Jessie. Jessie was one of the co-heads of the cheerleading team, Bob as the schools top tackle. It had been a natural match. Now, they both looked worn and washed out, with two kids already, Bobs muscle turning to fat quick and Jessie wasnt exactly svelte anymore. Eric heard Bob was in construction framing down in Beckley. Eric had a hard time adjusting the picture of the two in high school.
Behind them were the Piersons. Mr. Pierson and Mrs. Pierson looked pretty much the same as they always had, a good looking couple. Mr. Pierson was the local veterinarian, Mrs. Pierson had been a legal secretary to one of the towns lawyers for years. But Eric stopped and blinked for a moment at the people with them. The Piersons had four children. Paul had been a year ahead of Eric in school and Eric heard hed gone to college so he wasnt around. The youngest girl had to be Linda, but shed really grown. She must be ten or so by now and had shot up. Then there was Hector. He was recognizable by the shock of white hair but that was about it. Whered the pimples come from?
But the one that really caught him was the teenage girl with them. The other Pierson child would be Brooke but that couldnt be Brooke. He conjured up a vague memory of a gawky and awkward blonde girl who had just entered HS the year he was graduating. Shed had a serious overbite that mildly effected her speech and a mass of metal to go with it. Nice hair, a mass of naturally curly blonde locks, but
Jesus! It had to be Brooke Pierson. But the maulking vision in a pink dress sitting with them couldnt Same damned hair, though. Shit, it was Brooke Shed sure shot more than up.
He turned away as the girl in question looked his way, as if divining that hed been staring. It wasnt that, though. Hed caught other looks from the congregation as the service had gone on. The Dress Blues certainly stood out and Dad had told him that the decoration had been written up in the local paper. Given that they werent, as far as anyone knew, at war, the award of the Navy Cross had been big news in a very small town.
Looking away from the girl who hell shed be seventeen which would get you twenty even in West Virginia he saw Coach Radner looking his way. The old paratrooper gave him a respectful nod, one former warrior to the present generation, and turned back to ignoring the sermon.
It was times like this that got Eric thinking. Looking around the congregation he picked out the veterans. There were a bunch: small towns like Crab Orchard had always provided more than their fair share of soldiers and Marines. But they left quite a few behind, too. The annual Memorial Day celebrations pointed that out, the roads lined with crosses with names on them. More crosses than there were people that lived in the town it sometimes seemed. WWII, WWI, Korea, Vietnam, the aborted War on Terror, the Dreen War
Would one of those crosses one day say Eric Bergstresser? Or would he be one of the guys in the congregation, running to fat but there to see their grandkids? Would he sit around in the VFW hall and tell stories about crabpus and Demons? Or would he be an empty box in a grave, a guy people sort of recalled on Memorial Day, but really nothing but a fading memory?
He shook his head to clear the thought as the sermon finally droned to a close. The new priest, priestess, whatever, sure seemed devoted but my God she was boring. There had to be better uses of his time but Mom wanted to show off her Marine-hero son. Given that it might be the last chance she got, he owed her that. It was that that had decided him on coming. Not that he was going to put it to her that way.
Since he was in church he figured he ought to pray, some, for a chance to come back to it. But he was blanking on prayers. No, there was one.
For heathen heart that puts her trust
In reeking tube and iron shard
All valiant dust that builds on dust,
And guarding calls not Thee to guard.
For frantic boast and foolish word,
Thy Mercy on Thy People, Lord!
What was that, Eric? his mom asked, as the congregation rose to do what Eric thought of as the huggy thing.
Just a prayer, Mom, Eric said as the lady in front of him, who he didnt recognize, turned around to get a hug and a welcome. Its called Recessional.
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