Microsoft word nylund.., p.27
Microsoft Word - Nylund, Eric - Halo 3 - First Strike.doc, page 27
Thunder ripped through Ascendant Justice's hull; a geyser of flames shot out the passageway to the bridge. The air jumped and
hissed as it escaped the pressurized chamber.
The bulkhead door slammed shut, and the air stilled.
Sergeant Johnson shook his head clear from the sudden drop
in pressure. "Let's drop out of this mixed-up Slipspace and start fighting."
"Yeah, or just get rid of that crystal," Locklear said. "If it's the cause of all this mess." He drew his pistol. "One round and boom! Problem solved."
"Don't do that!" Dr. Halsey snapped. "A drop back to normal space has us facing a dozen or more cruisers. And if you destroy
the crystal, the expanded Slipspace bubble we're in would in-
stantly collapse. Every separate mass in the bubble will compact
into a single mass. We wouldn't survive the transition."
218
HALO: FIRST STRIKE
Worry creased Admiral Whitcomb's features. "That leaves
just one option. Cortana, give me flank speed and heat up every
weapon we have. We're going to run right over these Covenant
ships. Tangled space or not, we're going to blast them right back
to normal space from point-blank range."
"Yes, Admiral," Cortana said. "Engines answering flank speed."
A dull thump echoed from the aft section.
"Stand by," Cortana said. "There's a problem with the primary engines—a power drop occurred just as I engaged."
On the bridge displays the external cameras turned and focused
on the aft hull of Ascendant Justice. A snakelike plasma conduit came into focus. Cortana adjusted the image, and a
three-meter-wide hole in the conduit snapped into view.
Streamers of blue-white gas vented from the breach.
"That's our main drive conduit," Cortana said. "It's taken a hit.
I'm shutting down engines to conserve power."
The Master Chief squinted. "That was no plasma hit," he muttered. "It was too precise and too inconvenient—this had to be
sabotage."
Admiral Whitcomb scowled. "Chief, take your team and pre-
pare for a zero-gee repair of the plasma conduit."
"Yes, sir."
Polaski stepped forward. "I'll go too, sir," she said. Locklear grasped her by the arm and tried to pull her back, but she
shrugged his hand off. "I can pilot the dropship—get the Spartan team in and out faster."
The Admiral narrowed his eyes, assessing the young woman.
"Very well, Warrant Officer." He added so softly that the Chief almost missed it: "Too many damned heroes in this war."
Polaski turned to Locklear, handed him back his bandanna,
and whispered, "Hang on to that for me, Corporal. I'll pick it up when I get back."
Locklear's hand clenched, then relaxed. He took the token,
nodded, and looked away. "I'll be here," he said and tied it around his arm.
"Chief," Admiral Whitcomb said. "Make sure you come back alive. That's an order, son."
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
TIME:DATE RECORD [[ERROR]]ANOMALYDate unknown
Captured Covenant dropship near flagship Ascendant Justice,
in anomalous Slipspace bubble.
The faintly blue luminous walls of the Covenant dropship
pressed in, which made John feel slightly claustrophobic. It was
ironic when he stopped to think about it, because he was always
inside his skintight armor. His fellow Spartans sat in the bay be-
side him, motionless.
Fred, designated Blue-Two on this mission, was John's second
in command. He had fought in more than 120 campaigns, was a
great leader and a quick thinker. Sometimes he took the respon-
sibility of his command too seriously, though, empathizing too
deeply with any wounded member of his team.
Li, Blue-Three, was the team's zero-gee combat specialist. He
had trained extensively with microgravity equipment and mar-
tial arts at the UNSC's extreme-conditions facility on Chiron in
orbit about Mars. He was as much at home in free fall as the rest
of them were on solid land, and John was glad to have him on
this mission.
Anton, Blue-Four, had John worried. He spent most of his life
with his feet firmly planted on the ground. He'd cross-trained in
tracking, camouflage, and stealth, and had been used almost ex-
clusively on ground-based operations. More than once he had
expressed discomfort in zero-gee situations.
Will, Blue-Five, was quiet, but had never failed to complete
his mission. He wasn't always that way, though. When he was
younger he was the one with the jokes and riddles that kept the
team's spirits high. Something had hardened in him over the
220
HALO: FIRST STRIKE
years . . . as it had in them all. But with Will something special
had been lost.
Grace, Blue-Six, had a knack for explosives. She could shape a
charge to cut through a single steel bolt with only a whisper
sound, or rig a hundred thousand liters of kerosene to blow into a
firestorm from hell. Ironically her temper was nonexistent.
John opened a COM channel. "Give me a systems check,
Blue Team."
Five acknowledgment lights winked on.
"This reminds me of the underwater mission Chief Mendez
sent us on at Emerald Cove," Fred whispered. "When he sabotaged half our air tanks? And we ended up stealing his."
"And after," Anton said, laughing, "we ditched him and camped on that island. It was a week with nothing to do but light bonfires, bake clams, and surf."
"Mmrnmm," Grace added, "calamari."
John wondered if Emerald Cove even existed anymore. The
UNSC had abandoned that colony a decade ago. The Covenant
had most likely glassed that world.
"Blue Team." Polaski's voice broke over the COM. "Local conditions are as calm as they're going to get. Exiting in three...
two... one!'
John felt the acceleration in the pit of his stomach. He rose,
moved to the hatch, and popped it open. Outside, Ascendant Jus-
tice's hull moved past them—almost every square centimeter of the flagship's polished alloy skin had been scarred by heat and
micrometeors; tendrils of metal vapor snaked and shimmered in
the vacuum.
On Ascendant Justice's upper deck he saw the looming
shadow of the inverted UNSC frigate Gettysburg still miraculously attached. It was on fire, pockmarked with craters, and
venting atmosphere, but it was remarkably intact. If not for the
thousands of dead Naval personnel undoubtedly on board, he
might have christened the ship "lucky."
The dropship slowed and Polaski drifted, turned, and de-
scended onto the surface of the ship.
"Latch engaged," she said over the COM. "All yours, Chief."
"Fred, Grace, and I will reconnoiter," he told Blue Team. "Anton, Will, and Li, get ready to move the arc welder and hull plates
ERIC NYLUND
221
we scavenged from the Gettysburg when we give the all-clear signal."
John eased his boots onto the hull. Their magnetic soles
clamped onto the metal with a satisfying click.
Polaski had landed the Covenant dropship so that its mandibles
cradled the hole and gave them some shelter.
Overhead, Slipspace was on fire. It looked as if someone had
doused the night with jet fuel and ignited it. Bloody, boiling
streaks of flame tore across a midnight-blue sky. Meteors flashed
past and sprayed molten metal in trails of glittering Stardust.
A fist-sized projectile blurred past the Master Chief and
rammed into the ship's starboard side. Sparks and liquefied alloy
spattered into space. His shields flickered as debris ricocheted
from the armor's protective field.
They had to move fast. The Admiral was right: This was a
shooting galley. The quicker they sealed that hole and got out of
here—the better.
John turned and swept his rifle over the terrain. There were
bumpy sensor nodes, kilometers of conduits, and a dozen gaping
canyons in the hull. A legion of Covenant warriors could hide in
this mess.
No enemy contact. Nothing on his motion sensors, either.
He stepped close to the main-drive conduit and examined the
hole. The pipe was five meters across and still red hot, even
though Cortana had shut it down three minutes ago. The hole
was round, a three-meter-wide gap, with ragged edges that all
pointed inward.
"If that was from a plasma strike," Grace said, "the metal would have been boiled away. If it was from an impact, the edges
would be scraped on one side, compacted on the other. This hole
was deliberately made."
"Eyes sharp," John said. "We have company. My guess is camouflaged Elites. Maybe some of the original crew still alive.
Blue-Three, -Four, and -Five—move out."
"Roger," Will replied.
Anton emerged from the dropship hefting an arc welder,
while Will and Li maneuvered the three-by-three-meter hull
plates.
"Fred and Grace, you're on the welders," John ordered. "An-222
HALO: FIRST STRIKE
ton, post on top of the dropship. Li, you're at three o'clock. Will
at nine. I'll take the six."
Blue acknowledgment lights winked on.
John helped Fred and Grace set the plates in position. Grace
and Fred fired up the arc welder, and pinpoints of metal liquefied
beneath their tips. A shower of sparks swirled around them in the
evacuated environment like a swarm of fireflies.
"We're in position, Admiral," John reported. "ETA for repairs is two minutes."
"Roger, Chief," Admiral Whitcomb replied. Ionization made
the channel flood with static. "When you're done, give the word and get secure—we'll be accelerating immediately."
"Yes, sir."
So far, so good, John thought. Just another minute or two.
A streamer of plasma appeared from nowhere. The tangled,
crisscrossed Slipspace around them dropped the bolt of boiling
fire fifty meters overhead; it moved port to starboard—and van-
ished back into the void.
The COM shattered into white noise, and the motion sensors
blurred. . . as did the active camouflage shielding of the six Elites who had been slowly—and until a moment ago imperceptibly—
crawling toward their position.
"Enemy contacts!" John shouted.
He crouched behind the dome of a sensor node and opened
fire. A hail of bullets caught the closest Elite dead-center in its
chest. The gunfire punched through its shielding and then tore
into its armor. It tumbled backward and spun off the hull.
In his peripheral vision John saw the silent muzzle flashes from
his team. He glanced back; Fred and Grace hadn't moved. They
stared at the beads of molten alloy under their arc welder's tip.
As if Fred could read his mind, he said, "I need another twenty seconds, Chief."
A volley of crystalline needles fired from one of the Elites
peppered the sensor node. The Master Chief returned fire, but
the Elite's camouflage kicked in and it faded from view.
Another plasma bolt sizzled close to the hull, this one thirty
meters to port. It was a river of fire that lit the surface of Ascendant Justice like a dozen suns. John's shields drained to a quarter.
"Okay, Chief," Fred told him, "I'm—"
ERIC NYLUND
223
"Incoming!" Polaski cried over the COM.
John turned to the dropship and saw a third plasma projectile
materialize from the folds of tangled Slipspace. This one skimmed
a mere three meters over the hull—straight toward them.
Will dived into the crux where the dropship met the hull. Fred
and Grace hit the deck. Li stood his ground and fired at the
Elites, muzzle flash reflected in his helmet's faceplate. Anton
rose from his limited cover on top of the dropship, but instinc-
tively ducked again as an Elite took a shot at him. John crouched,
jumped, and propelled himself into the sheltered area between
the dropship's mandibles.
The plasma blasted over the dropship like a tidal wave of fire.
Polaski screamed, and her channel went silent.
Blue-white light filled John's vision, and electrical discharges
jolted his flesh and buzzed through his muscles and ligaments.
Temperature warnings blared. Boiling hydrostatic gel vented
through his MJOLNIR armor's emergency ducts.
Through blurry eyes, John saw the Covenant Elites flash va-
porize. Downship, Ascendant Justice's hull heated to a glowing yellow and softened.
Then the light and heat vanished, and the torrent of fire trailed
aft like the tail of a comet.
John craned his neck up, every muscle in his body screaming
in pain. There was no trace of Li or Anton. The dropship's hull
was melted and distorted like a wax candle caught in a blow-
torch's blast.
The cockpit and Polaski were gone.
His biosign warning blared. Will, Grace, and Fred lay next to
him—dead or unconscious, he couldn't tell. He quickly attached
their tethers to the deck, then clipped his own in place.
John keyed the COM. "Admiral, conduit breach is sealed, sir."
"Hang on, son," Admiral Whitcomb replied. "This might be a rough ride."
John slumped to the deck unconscious.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
TIME:DATE RECORD [[ERROR]]ANOMALYDate
Unknown Captured Covenant flagship Ascendant Justice, in anomalous Slipspace bubble.
Admiral Whitcomb stood on the bridge of Ascendant Justice.
He gripped the edges of the railing that encircled the central
raised platform and watched the sea of fire on the wall displays.
They were stuck in this pocket of Slipspace, trapped like an
insect in amber as lines of plasma crisscrossed the region.
Enemy fire vanished and reappeared, smearing the blue fog of
Slipspace with crimson streaks of glowing energy. Molten
chunks of metal, the broken pieces of Covenant ships, streaked
past the cameras—comets that thudded into their hull.
There was another danger in the blue fog: ghost ships that ap-
peared and faded from sight... more than half of them disabled,
engulfed in fire, or their hulls broken. How many of those Cove-
nant craft were still capable of engaging Ascendant Justice"!
How many could they take out before they risked the jump back
to normal space?
Lieutenant Haverson stood next to him. The young man was
invaluable for his tactical assessments and knowledge of the
Covenant. He was a bit too cautious for Whitcomb's taste—
though the trait was to be expected in an ONI officer, he sup-
posed. Still, the young Lieutenant had shown enough backbone
to stand up to him. The kid definitely had some potential.
A square on the holographic controls morphed into the tiny
figure of Cortana.
"Sporadic plasma and mass impacts along our hull, Admiral,"
she reported and crossed her arms. "Atmospheric integrity down
ERIC NYLUNO
225
to thirteen percent. Structural integrity rated poor. I estimate the hull will fail in no more than five minutes."
"Understood," the Admiral replied.
They didn't have much choice but to play the hand that they'd
been dealt. The longer they stayed in this environment, the more
damage the Covenant ships surrounding them incurred. If As-
cendant Justice had engines, the Admiral could accelerate that process. But if they waited too long, their own ship would disintegrate around them.
Admiral Whitcomb glanced up to see how the rest of his crew
was holding up under the pressure.
Locklear paced, his hands flexing. The ODST was a weapon
with its safety permanently clicked off... and on overload charge.
Sergeant Johnson stood near the sealed bulkhead, rifle slung
over his shoulder. He was looking at the crew and probably for-
mulating his own opinions about them. He was rock-solid. One
glance into his dark eyes and the Admiral understood what drove
the man: pure cold hatred of the enemy. The Admiral could ap-
preciate that.
Dr. Halsey tended the Spartan called "Kelly" on the deck. The doctor was brilliant... but a total mystery to him. They had met
half a dozen times before at upper-echelon social gatherings,
and he'd found her to be charming and outwardly likable. But
he'd read enough reports of her "projects" that he'd found it impossible to relate to her. If half the rumors he'd heard about her
were true, she'd been mixed up in every black op from here to
Andromeda. He didn't trust her.
"Doctor Halsey," the Admiral said. He released his grip on the railing and clasped his hands behind his back to conceal his
sweaty palms. "Clear my bridge of the wounded, ASAP."
Dr. Halsey looked up from her data pad and the fluctuating
patterns of Kelly's biosigns. "Admiral, I don't want to move her.
She not entirely stable."
"Do it, Doctor. She's a distraction. We have a battle to fight
here."
hissed as it escaped the pressurized chamber.
The bulkhead door slammed shut, and the air stilled.
Sergeant Johnson shook his head clear from the sudden drop
in pressure. "Let's drop out of this mixed-up Slipspace and start fighting."
"Yeah, or just get rid of that crystal," Locklear said. "If it's the cause of all this mess." He drew his pistol. "One round and boom! Problem solved."
"Don't do that!" Dr. Halsey snapped. "A drop back to normal space has us facing a dozen or more cruisers. And if you destroy
the crystal, the expanded Slipspace bubble we're in would in-
stantly collapse. Every separate mass in the bubble will compact
into a single mass. We wouldn't survive the transition."
218
HALO: FIRST STRIKE
Worry creased Admiral Whitcomb's features. "That leaves
just one option. Cortana, give me flank speed and heat up every
weapon we have. We're going to run right over these Covenant
ships. Tangled space or not, we're going to blast them right back
to normal space from point-blank range."
"Yes, Admiral," Cortana said. "Engines answering flank speed."
A dull thump echoed from the aft section.
"Stand by," Cortana said. "There's a problem with the primary engines—a power drop occurred just as I engaged."
On the bridge displays the external cameras turned and focused
on the aft hull of Ascendant Justice. A snakelike plasma conduit came into focus. Cortana adjusted the image, and a
three-meter-wide hole in the conduit snapped into view.
Streamers of blue-white gas vented from the breach.
"That's our main drive conduit," Cortana said. "It's taken a hit.
I'm shutting down engines to conserve power."
The Master Chief squinted. "That was no plasma hit," he muttered. "It was too precise and too inconvenient—this had to be
sabotage."
Admiral Whitcomb scowled. "Chief, take your team and pre-
pare for a zero-gee repair of the plasma conduit."
"Yes, sir."
Polaski stepped forward. "I'll go too, sir," she said. Locklear grasped her by the arm and tried to pull her back, but she
shrugged his hand off. "I can pilot the dropship—get the Spartan team in and out faster."
The Admiral narrowed his eyes, assessing the young woman.
"Very well, Warrant Officer." He added so softly that the Chief almost missed it: "Too many damned heroes in this war."
Polaski turned to Locklear, handed him back his bandanna,
and whispered, "Hang on to that for me, Corporal. I'll pick it up when I get back."
Locklear's hand clenched, then relaxed. He took the token,
nodded, and looked away. "I'll be here," he said and tied it around his arm.
"Chief," Admiral Whitcomb said. "Make sure you come back alive. That's an order, son."
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
TIME:DATE RECORD [[ERROR]]ANOMALYDate unknown
Captured Covenant dropship near flagship Ascendant Justice,
in anomalous Slipspace bubble.
The faintly blue luminous walls of the Covenant dropship
pressed in, which made John feel slightly claustrophobic. It was
ironic when he stopped to think about it, because he was always
inside his skintight armor. His fellow Spartans sat in the bay be-
side him, motionless.
Fred, designated Blue-Two on this mission, was John's second
in command. He had fought in more than 120 campaigns, was a
great leader and a quick thinker. Sometimes he took the respon-
sibility of his command too seriously, though, empathizing too
deeply with any wounded member of his team.
Li, Blue-Three, was the team's zero-gee combat specialist. He
had trained extensively with microgravity equipment and mar-
tial arts at the UNSC's extreme-conditions facility on Chiron in
orbit about Mars. He was as much at home in free fall as the rest
of them were on solid land, and John was glad to have him on
this mission.
Anton, Blue-Four, had John worried. He spent most of his life
with his feet firmly planted on the ground. He'd cross-trained in
tracking, camouflage, and stealth, and had been used almost ex-
clusively on ground-based operations. More than once he had
expressed discomfort in zero-gee situations.
Will, Blue-Five, was quiet, but had never failed to complete
his mission. He wasn't always that way, though. When he was
younger he was the one with the jokes and riddles that kept the
team's spirits high. Something had hardened in him over the
220
HALO: FIRST STRIKE
years . . . as it had in them all. But with Will something special
had been lost.
Grace, Blue-Six, had a knack for explosives. She could shape a
charge to cut through a single steel bolt with only a whisper
sound, or rig a hundred thousand liters of kerosene to blow into a
firestorm from hell. Ironically her temper was nonexistent.
John opened a COM channel. "Give me a systems check,
Blue Team."
Five acknowledgment lights winked on.
"This reminds me of the underwater mission Chief Mendez
sent us on at Emerald Cove," Fred whispered. "When he sabotaged half our air tanks? And we ended up stealing his."
"And after," Anton said, laughing, "we ditched him and camped on that island. It was a week with nothing to do but light bonfires, bake clams, and surf."
"Mmrnmm," Grace added, "calamari."
John wondered if Emerald Cove even existed anymore. The
UNSC had abandoned that colony a decade ago. The Covenant
had most likely glassed that world.
"Blue Team." Polaski's voice broke over the COM. "Local conditions are as calm as they're going to get. Exiting in three...
two... one!'
John felt the acceleration in the pit of his stomach. He rose,
moved to the hatch, and popped it open. Outside, Ascendant Jus-
tice's hull moved past them—almost every square centimeter of the flagship's polished alloy skin had been scarred by heat and
micrometeors; tendrils of metal vapor snaked and shimmered in
the vacuum.
On Ascendant Justice's upper deck he saw the looming
shadow of the inverted UNSC frigate Gettysburg still miraculously attached. It was on fire, pockmarked with craters, and
venting atmosphere, but it was remarkably intact. If not for the
thousands of dead Naval personnel undoubtedly on board, he
might have christened the ship "lucky."
The dropship slowed and Polaski drifted, turned, and de-
scended onto the surface of the ship.
"Latch engaged," she said over the COM. "All yours, Chief."
"Fred, Grace, and I will reconnoiter," he told Blue Team. "Anton, Will, and Li, get ready to move the arc welder and hull plates
ERIC NYLUND
221
we scavenged from the Gettysburg when we give the all-clear signal."
John eased his boots onto the hull. Their magnetic soles
clamped onto the metal with a satisfying click.
Polaski had landed the Covenant dropship so that its mandibles
cradled the hole and gave them some shelter.
Overhead, Slipspace was on fire. It looked as if someone had
doused the night with jet fuel and ignited it. Bloody, boiling
streaks of flame tore across a midnight-blue sky. Meteors flashed
past and sprayed molten metal in trails of glittering Stardust.
A fist-sized projectile blurred past the Master Chief and
rammed into the ship's starboard side. Sparks and liquefied alloy
spattered into space. His shields flickered as debris ricocheted
from the armor's protective field.
They had to move fast. The Admiral was right: This was a
shooting galley. The quicker they sealed that hole and got out of
here—the better.
John turned and swept his rifle over the terrain. There were
bumpy sensor nodes, kilometers of conduits, and a dozen gaping
canyons in the hull. A legion of Covenant warriors could hide in
this mess.
No enemy contact. Nothing on his motion sensors, either.
He stepped close to the main-drive conduit and examined the
hole. The pipe was five meters across and still red hot, even
though Cortana had shut it down three minutes ago. The hole
was round, a three-meter-wide gap, with ragged edges that all
pointed inward.
"If that was from a plasma strike," Grace said, "the metal would have been boiled away. If it was from an impact, the edges
would be scraped on one side, compacted on the other. This hole
was deliberately made."
"Eyes sharp," John said. "We have company. My guess is camouflaged Elites. Maybe some of the original crew still alive.
Blue-Three, -Four, and -Five—move out."
"Roger," Will replied.
Anton emerged from the dropship hefting an arc welder,
while Will and Li maneuvered the three-by-three-meter hull
plates.
"Fred and Grace, you're on the welders," John ordered. "An-222
HALO: FIRST STRIKE
ton, post on top of the dropship. Li, you're at three o'clock. Will
at nine. I'll take the six."
Blue acknowledgment lights winked on.
John helped Fred and Grace set the plates in position. Grace
and Fred fired up the arc welder, and pinpoints of metal liquefied
beneath their tips. A shower of sparks swirled around them in the
evacuated environment like a swarm of fireflies.
"We're in position, Admiral," John reported. "ETA for repairs is two minutes."
"Roger, Chief," Admiral Whitcomb replied. Ionization made
the channel flood with static. "When you're done, give the word and get secure—we'll be accelerating immediately."
"Yes, sir."
So far, so good, John thought. Just another minute or two.
A streamer of plasma appeared from nowhere. The tangled,
crisscrossed Slipspace around them dropped the bolt of boiling
fire fifty meters overhead; it moved port to starboard—and van-
ished back into the void.
The COM shattered into white noise, and the motion sensors
blurred. . . as did the active camouflage shielding of the six Elites who had been slowly—and until a moment ago imperceptibly—
crawling toward their position.
"Enemy contacts!" John shouted.
He crouched behind the dome of a sensor node and opened
fire. A hail of bullets caught the closest Elite dead-center in its
chest. The gunfire punched through its shielding and then tore
into its armor. It tumbled backward and spun off the hull.
In his peripheral vision John saw the silent muzzle flashes from
his team. He glanced back; Fred and Grace hadn't moved. They
stared at the beads of molten alloy under their arc welder's tip.
As if Fred could read his mind, he said, "I need another twenty seconds, Chief."
A volley of crystalline needles fired from one of the Elites
peppered the sensor node. The Master Chief returned fire, but
the Elite's camouflage kicked in and it faded from view.
Another plasma bolt sizzled close to the hull, this one thirty
meters to port. It was a river of fire that lit the surface of Ascendant Justice like a dozen suns. John's shields drained to a quarter.
"Okay, Chief," Fred told him, "I'm—"
ERIC NYLUND
223
"Incoming!" Polaski cried over the COM.
John turned to the dropship and saw a third plasma projectile
materialize from the folds of tangled Slipspace. This one skimmed
a mere three meters over the hull—straight toward them.
Will dived into the crux where the dropship met the hull. Fred
and Grace hit the deck. Li stood his ground and fired at the
Elites, muzzle flash reflected in his helmet's faceplate. Anton
rose from his limited cover on top of the dropship, but instinc-
tively ducked again as an Elite took a shot at him. John crouched,
jumped, and propelled himself into the sheltered area between
the dropship's mandibles.
The plasma blasted over the dropship like a tidal wave of fire.
Polaski screamed, and her channel went silent.
Blue-white light filled John's vision, and electrical discharges
jolted his flesh and buzzed through his muscles and ligaments.
Temperature warnings blared. Boiling hydrostatic gel vented
through his MJOLNIR armor's emergency ducts.
Through blurry eyes, John saw the Covenant Elites flash va-
porize. Downship, Ascendant Justice's hull heated to a glowing yellow and softened.
Then the light and heat vanished, and the torrent of fire trailed
aft like the tail of a comet.
John craned his neck up, every muscle in his body screaming
in pain. There was no trace of Li or Anton. The dropship's hull
was melted and distorted like a wax candle caught in a blow-
torch's blast.
The cockpit and Polaski were gone.
His biosign warning blared. Will, Grace, and Fred lay next to
him—dead or unconscious, he couldn't tell. He quickly attached
their tethers to the deck, then clipped his own in place.
John keyed the COM. "Admiral, conduit breach is sealed, sir."
"Hang on, son," Admiral Whitcomb replied. "This might be a rough ride."
John slumped to the deck unconscious.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
TIME:DATE RECORD [[ERROR]]ANOMALYDate
Unknown Captured Covenant flagship Ascendant Justice, in anomalous Slipspace bubble.
Admiral Whitcomb stood on the bridge of Ascendant Justice.
He gripped the edges of the railing that encircled the central
raised platform and watched the sea of fire on the wall displays.
They were stuck in this pocket of Slipspace, trapped like an
insect in amber as lines of plasma crisscrossed the region.
Enemy fire vanished and reappeared, smearing the blue fog of
Slipspace with crimson streaks of glowing energy. Molten
chunks of metal, the broken pieces of Covenant ships, streaked
past the cameras—comets that thudded into their hull.
There was another danger in the blue fog: ghost ships that ap-
peared and faded from sight... more than half of them disabled,
engulfed in fire, or their hulls broken. How many of those Cove-
nant craft were still capable of engaging Ascendant Justice"!
How many could they take out before they risked the jump back
to normal space?
Lieutenant Haverson stood next to him. The young man was
invaluable for his tactical assessments and knowledge of the
Covenant. He was a bit too cautious for Whitcomb's taste—
though the trait was to be expected in an ONI officer, he sup-
posed. Still, the young Lieutenant had shown enough backbone
to stand up to him. The kid definitely had some potential.
A square on the holographic controls morphed into the tiny
figure of Cortana.
"Sporadic plasma and mass impacts along our hull, Admiral,"
she reported and crossed her arms. "Atmospheric integrity down
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to thirteen percent. Structural integrity rated poor. I estimate the hull will fail in no more than five minutes."
"Understood," the Admiral replied.
They didn't have much choice but to play the hand that they'd
been dealt. The longer they stayed in this environment, the more
damage the Covenant ships surrounding them incurred. If As-
cendant Justice had engines, the Admiral could accelerate that process. But if they waited too long, their own ship would disintegrate around them.
Admiral Whitcomb glanced up to see how the rest of his crew
was holding up under the pressure.
Locklear paced, his hands flexing. The ODST was a weapon
with its safety permanently clicked off... and on overload charge.
Sergeant Johnson stood near the sealed bulkhead, rifle slung
over his shoulder. He was looking at the crew and probably for-
mulating his own opinions about them. He was rock-solid. One
glance into his dark eyes and the Admiral understood what drove
the man: pure cold hatred of the enemy. The Admiral could ap-
preciate that.
Dr. Halsey tended the Spartan called "Kelly" on the deck. The doctor was brilliant... but a total mystery to him. They had met
half a dozen times before at upper-echelon social gatherings,
and he'd found her to be charming and outwardly likable. But
he'd read enough reports of her "projects" that he'd found it impossible to relate to her. If half the rumors he'd heard about her
were true, she'd been mixed up in every black op from here to
Andromeda. He didn't trust her.
"Doctor Halsey," the Admiral said. He released his grip on the railing and clasped his hands behind his back to conceal his
sweaty palms. "Clear my bridge of the wounded, ASAP."
Dr. Halsey looked up from her data pad and the fluctuating
patterns of Kelly's biosigns. "Admiral, I don't want to move her.
She not entirely stable."
"Do it, Doctor. She's a distraction. We have a battle to fight
here."
