Read Halo: First Strike Online
Authors: Eric S. Nylund
Tags: #Science Fiction - Adventure, #Fiction - Science Fiction, #Video & Electronic, #Action & Adventure, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Imaginary wars and battles, #Space Opera, #Halo (Game), #General, #Space warfare, #Science Fiction - General, #Human-alien encounters, #Games, #Adventure, #Outer space, #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #Computer games
| Halo Tom Maddox Part I From the author: You may read these files, copy them, and distribute them in any way you wish so long as you do not change them in any way or receive money for them. I have entered HALO into the distribution networks of the Net, but I retain the copyright to the novel. If you paid for these files, you were cheated; if you sold them, you have cheated. Otherwise, have fun and spread the book around. If you have any comments on the book or this distribution, you can send me e-mail at: November, 1994 HALO Tom Maddox To the memory of George Maddox, my father; Paul Cohen, my friend; and all our lamented dead, lost in time. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Here are some of the people I owe in the writing of this book. My wife Janis and son Tom. They have had to put up with the problems of a novelist in the houseincluding arbitrary mood swings and chronic unavailability for many of the usual pleasures of life. To both, my love and gratitude for their love, patience, and understanding. My best friends: Leo Daugherty, Jeffrey Frohner, Bill Gibson and Lee Graham. My mother Jewell, my brother Bill and sister Janet. Ellen Datlow: she published my first stories in Omni and showed me how a really good editor works. Also, two friends who patiently read through drafts of those stories before Ellen got them: Geoff Hicks and Larry Reed. The readers of various incarnations of this book: Beth Meacham, my editor at Tor Books; Merilee Heifetz, my agent; Bruce and Nancy Sterling, great readers; Melinda Howard and Gary Worthington; Lynne Farr; Carol Poole. Also, the members of the Evergreen Writers' Workshop, especially Pat Murphy. The Usenet community, friend and foe, for ideas about a quite astonishing number of things, and for the continuing fascination of life online; with special thanks to Patricia O Tuana and the members of "eniac." The usual suspects at the Conference on the Fantastic, with a special nod to Brian Aldiss, because we'd all be happier if there were more like him running around. At The Evergreen State College, many people who gave technical advice. (Perhaps needless to say, any consequent blunders are entirely mine.) Mike Beug and Paul Stamets, world- class mycologists and explainers, talked to me about mushrooms and provided invaluable references. Mark Papworth applied a coroner's eye to a carcass I made. The faculty and students of the Habitats Coordinated Studies Program, 1988-89 helped me to think about a space habitat's ecosystem. A list, much too long to include here, of friends, both colleagues and students, at Evergreenthough I have to mention Barbara Smith and David Paulsen, whose cabin and cat make cameo appearances. And all I've known who can find a piece of themselves in this book. PART I. of V Everything is destined to reappear as simulation. Jean Baudrillard, America 1. Burning, Burning On a rainy morning in Seattle, Gonzales was ready for the egg. A week ago he had returned from Myanmar, the country once known as Burma, and now, after two days of drugs and fasting, he was prepared: he had become an alien, at home in a distant landscape. His brain was filled with blossoms of fire, their spread white flesh torched to yellow, the center of a burning world. On the dark stained oak door, angel wings danced in blue flame, their faces beatific in the cold fire. Staring at the animated carved figures, Gonzales thought, the fire is in my eyes, in my brain. He pushed down the s-curved brass handle and stepped through to the hallway, his split-toed shoes of soft cotton and rope scuffing without noise across floors of bleached oak. Through the open door at the hallway's end, morning's light through stained glass made abstract patterns of crimson and buttery yellow. Inside the room, a blue monitor console stood against the far wall, SenTrax corporate sunburst glowing on its face; in the center of the room was the egg, split hemispheres of chromed steel, cracked and waiting. One half-egg was filled with beige tubes and snakes of optic cable, the other half with hard dark plastic lying slack against the shell. Gonzales rubbed his hands across his eyes, then pulled his hair back into a long hank and slipped a circle of elastic over it. He reached to his waist and grabbed the bottom hem of his navy blue t-shirt and pulled the shirt over his head. Dropping it to the floor, he kicked off his shoes, stepped out of baggy tan pants and loose white cotton underpants and stood naked, his pale skin gleaming with a light coat of sweat. His skin felt hot, eyes grainy, stomach sore. He stepped up and into a chrome half-egg, then shivered and lay back as body-warmth liquid bled into the slack plastic, which began to balloon underneath him. He took hold of finger-thick cables and pushed their junction ends home into the sockets set in the back of his neck. As the egg continued to fill, he fit a mask over his face, felt its edges seal, and inhaled. Catheters moved toward his crotch, iv needles toward the crooks of both arms. The egg shut closed on him and liquid spilled into its interior. He floated in silence, waiting, breathing slowly and deeply as elation punched through the chaotic mix of emotions generated by drugs, meditation, and the egg. No matter that he was going to relive his own terror, this was what moved him: access to the many-worlds of human experiencetravel through space, time, and probability all in one. Virtual realities were everywherevirtual vacations, sex, superstardom, you name itbut compared to the egg, they were just high-res videogames or stage magic. VRs used a variety of tricks to simulate physical presence, but the sensorium could be fooled only to a certain degree, and when you inhabited a VR, you were conscious of it, so sustaining its illusion depended on willing suspension of disbelief. With the egg, however, you got total involvement through all sensory modalitiesthe worlds were so compelling that people waking from them often seemed lost in the waking world, as if it were a dream. A needle punched into a membrane set in one of the neural cables and injected a neuropeptide mix. Gonzales was transported. # It was the final day of Gonzales's three week stay in Pagan, the town in central Myanmar where the government had moved its records decades earlier, in the wake of ethnic rioting in Yangon. He sat with Grossback, the Division Head of SenTrax Myanmar, at a central rosewood table in the main conference room. The table's work stations, embedded oblongs of glass, lay dark and silent in front of them. Gonzales had come to Myanmar to do an information audit. The local SenTrax group supplied the Federated State of Myanmar with its primary information utilities: all its records of personnel and materiel, and all transactions among them. A month earlier, SenTrax Myanmar's reports had triggered "look-see" alarms in the home company's passive auditing programs, and Gonzales and his memex had been sent to look more closely at the raw data. So for twenty straight days Gonzales and the memex had explored data structures and their contents, testing nominal functional relationships against reality. Wherever there were movements of information, money, equipment or personnel, there were records, and the two followed. They searched cash trails, matched purchase orders to services and materiel, verified voucher signatures with personnel records, cross-checked the personnel records themselves against government databases, and traced the backgrounds and movements of the people they represented; they read contracts and back-chased to their bid and acquisition; they verified daily transaction logs. Hard, slogging work, all patience and detail, and so far it had shown nothing but the usual inefficienciesGrossback didn't run a particularly taut operation, but, as of the moment, he didn't seem to have a corrupt one. However, neither he nor SenTrax Myanmar was cleared yet; Gonzales's final report would come later, after he and the memex had analyzed the records at their leisure. Gonzales stretched and rubbed his eyes. As usual at the end of short-term, intensive gigs like this, he felt tired, washed- out, eager to go. He said to Grossback, "I've got a company plane out of here late this afternoon to Bangkok. I'll connect with whatever commercial flight's available there." Grossback smiled, obviously glad Gonzales was leaving. Grossback was a slight man, of mixed German and Thai descent; he had a light brown complexion, black hair, and delicate features. He wore politically correct clothing in the old-fashioned Burmese style: a dark skirt called a longyi, a white cotton shirt. During Gonzales's time there, Grossback had dealt with him coldly and correctly from behind a mask of corporate protocol and clenched teeth. Fair enough, Gonzales had thought: the man's operation was suspect, and him along with it. Anyway, people resented these outside intrusions almost every time; representing Internal Affairs, Gonzales answered only to his division head, |