I published this a while ago on Fanfiction.net but as I’m working on it I haven’t gotten as much feedback there as I would have liked to keep it going, so I’m bringing it here for new audiences.
October 20, 2552
Earth, Sol System
New Mombasa, Kenya
1950 Hours
Dusk. There was something majestic about its light, the intensity of a sun resting upon the horizon, arching its rays overhead, distracting the eye from the impending blanket of darkness on the surface. Even with Kenya’s thick shade of orange, it reminded me of the way Beta Centauri’s double-sun created a soft lavender that met with a deep blue over the Voutean sky before dark. It reminded me of home…and of the very real possibility of losing it.
Someone called my name, bringing me back to the fight against that reality. “Krone.” I ignored it to make time for myself as I caught up on checking the perimeter. Lousy mistake, I knew, but having been dropped into an active combat zone since noon, a little daydream was sure to carry me a long way.
A figure appeared past my shoulder, clad in black with a faceless blue stare just like me. “Hey, Mike.”
The voice belonged to Private First Class Ethan Wilks, a fresh-out-of qualification ODST, but for all I was concerned he knew how to do his job. I had found him in the awkward position of having crash landed in one of Mombasa’s financial towers, and since then we had been a two-man team until recently. Keeping my rifle downrange, I turned my head.
With a free hand, he held out a sealed package of 9.5x40mm rounds lined with a red tag labeled API. “I know you’re fond of incendiary, but this was all I could find. Raider platoon didn’t have much to spare from the last supply drop.”
Biting the inside of my cheek, I slung my BR55, took the package in one hand and tore the seal off before recovering the first empty magazine I could feel from the dump pouch on my waist. Shaking my head, I let my muscle memory take control of the reloading process. “Pickings are getting slim.”
We were joined by Kate Vansen, another PFC soon-to-be Specialist. She was from Ethan’s squad, and from what I could gather, the top thinker of the group. Her visor was depolarized, revealing sweat-bound strands of blood red hair and a weary, narrow face that betrayed her attempt to candy coat an inconvenient truth with her normally photogenic self.
“With evacuation part two in effect, there’s not much reason to keep sending ordnance drops.”
“We can make do,” I said, trying to encourage. It seemed a little late in the day for motivational talk. We were all tired, strung out, but I could probably speak for all of us if I said we were at no shortage of motivation. “Sun’s coming down,” I gestured to the fading light with my gaze.
Wilks acknowledged me with a shrug. “We still got a whole unsecured district between us and a plausible way out of the city.”
The healthy reminder was not without warrant, as the three of us were standing in the middle of an intersection, now orienting our attention away from the plaza and toward the traffic control door separating this district from the next.
“Did we get any intel on this section?”
From the corner of my eye, I could see Kate shake her head. “Covenant presence wasn’t dense enough to draw a whole lot of attention in the initial counter attack, and strategically it doesn’t hold much value.” Her head jerked in my direction. “I wouldn’t bank on us finding anyone, but it does lead to the waterfront.”
“We’ll have clear skies away from this concrete jungle,” Wilks said. “Our comms might be able to radio for an evac near the shipping docks…provided anyone’s still listening. We could split up when we’re inside to widen our sweep, just in case.”
I’m not sure what convinced me to do it, but without a second thought, I approached the massive routing gate and tapped my hand to the control. Maybe it was Kate’s logical assertion with a little of Ethan’s blind optimism bleeding in. The door chimed once, then groaned to life, and as it parted before us I turned once over my shoulder and justified our next move with a shrug.
“It’s not like we’ve got anything else going on.”
I could’ve laughed at the irony, but the sound of the traffic gate closing behind us sent the icy tendrils of regret up my spine as my mind equated it to the sound of a four ton guillotine. I finally got a better look at the district from this side of the checkpoint, and while I was all for working alone—having more room to maneuver—I wasn’t comfortable with splitting up our ad hoc squad here. There was a reason why Raider Platoon, the last remaining Marine relief force in New Mombasa, had colloquially labeled this zone “Black District.”
The name was not without sentimental depth. Where I initially thought “black” was meant to label this part of the city as a dead zone for communication, it was also referring to its complete and total lack of power. Not a single street light shone, nor any emergency guidance lights or displays. Everything hard-lined to Mombasa’s power grids was dead, and everything that wasn’t showed obvious signs of EMP damage, the by-product of Covenant slip-space jumps.
At the top of the traffic ramp, the five of us—Wilks, Kate, myself, a scout sniper from their squad named Ryan, and Adrian, a Marine rifleman from Raider Platoon who had little more option than to stick with us—collectively scanned an intersection fifteen meters down the declining road ahead of us. Verbally, none of us made a sound, but with such a heavy silence I could hear our Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) rattle and click with every turn and adjustment to our formation. When we finally started to move down the ramp, we may as well have been a marching band.
Nevertheless, our initial insertion was clear. Dim and grim looking, but void of anything to suggest immediate hostile activity. “Clear,” I muttered.
One at a time, the others repeated, and then Ryan spoke up. “We should go by twos.”
“There’s five of us,” Kate said flatly, weapon raised.
“One group gets three,” he curtly corrected.
I shifted my stance, aligning myself and my aim with a blackening street ahead. Ten meters ahead, where the previous district’s street lights ended, was a maw of darkness formed by the low street and the surrounding buildings. That’s where I chose to go.
And with my route set in mind, I spoke up. “Anything larger than two is just gonna draw attention out here. We’ll cover more ground if I go alone.”
“You’re taking a risk negating the buddy system,” Wilks said. “You said it yourself: Lone Wolf tactics are unorthodox.”
I shook my head. Damn him for remembering. “We’re way past conventional war.” It was a bland defense that I hoped he wouldn’t contest. However disappointed he was, he didn’t speak out against my appraisal. There was no such thing as orthodox anymore, and I wouldn’t readily admit that any other time. I followed my principles religiously; the structure we were trained with is there for a reason, but when stepping over the line make sure it’s been blurred first.
“I’ll see you at the docks.”