CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Above Base Fido, Nature’s Day, 21st of June, 2771
Toni returned to consciousness inside the personnel cabin of an air force copter. It was probably noisy out there, since all those without earmuffs were presently pressing their hands against their ears. One of the earmuffed soldiers noticed that he was conscious and said something to the high-ranking officer beside him. The old officer, whose appearance suggested that he had just survived hell, leaned over him and spoke a few words.
Toni wasn’t too good at reading lips, but the man seemed to be trying to console him. Toni asked whether the Unmil was dead, and was surprised to discover that he couldn’t hear his own voice. The sad expression on the officer alarmed him. Was he sad because it was not? Or was it because he hadn’t understood the question?
He tried to move but found that he couldn’t, and he began to panic, wondering whether he was strapped down or whether he no longer had use of his body. He closed his eyes, preferring the darkness, and felt hot tears roll down his face.
He returned to the warm void where his savage self roamed, and remained there for a while.
When he awoke again, Toni lay in a cot in a medical bay quite different from the one he had known at Base Fido.
That single compartment possessed a surface area larger than Fido’s medical bay, and hospital cots like his lined both sides of its considerable length. To his right was a wide entrance, its double-doors kept open as nurses and orderlies passed busily through to attend to the injured. The patients numbered at least thirty.
He suddenly realized that he was able to hear again, and he lay there for a while, weeping quietly and thanking the gods for their mercy. He then closed his eyes and listened to the sounds of his surroundings. His ears felt like they had been stuffed with cotton, but still he could hear nearby patients in conversation, the howling wind outside and even the occasional groan of pain.
Discovering also that he had the use of his left arm, he touched his hand to an ear and felt through its folds, finding nothing jammed in there. His ears were back, but they weren’t in good shape and possibly never would be. His sadness was greatly lessened when he found he could also move his legs. Slowly he flexed them, and felt more than heard his knees snap painfully. It was an acceptable pain, one that told him he might one day run again.
Something struck Toni’s head and he opened his eyes, peering about. Finding a crinkled piece of paper on his bandaged chest, he searched for its thrower, and found a patient of his age smiling in the cot beside him.
“Got your ears pretty hammered, huh?” the boy asked cheerily.
Toni had no difficulty in understanding the question, and indeed the other patients had winced at the loudness with which the boy had spoken.
The soldier turned out to be an aircraft maintenance assistant by the name of Harry Osaka. Four days previously, as they had been prepping a drone with missiles for an attack sortie, someone had made the mistake of maneuvering the forklift a little too aggressively and had collided against the craft, rupturing its fuel tank. The end result had been an escalating chain of fires, deflagrations and detonations that had left two base personnel dead and more than twenty injured, Harry among them.
When asked if he knew anything about what had happened at Base Fido, Harry appeared puzzled, and the base-rat was forced to grapevine with the remaining patients before presenting Toni with the sole tidbit of information regarding ROWAC’s and EWAC’s delaying activities; ROWAC’s commander was dead and a score more injured, both unit commands having been effectively put out of action by a single nuke. The information was known only due to the fact that the injured had been evacced to Lograin, all other details being classified. Swallowing his sadness for the old natural, Toni thanked the runway jockey for the intel.
They chatted for a while longer, Toni having to strain his ears and Harry his voice until an irritated nurse finally approached, putting an end to the loud conversation. They were duly informed that night had begun, and the curtains were closed and day-lights extinguished as if to underline the point.
Toni was relieved. The effort of keeping his head turned to his left side had left him with a crick that took a while to subside, and his brow had beaded with sweat with the effort it had required to listen to the chatty mechanic’s assistant. He closed his eyes again and found blissful darkness to match the silence. A nurse arrived shortly afterwards with a syringe and then it was his pain that was numbed, and he drifted off to sleep with titans colliding in his groggy mind.
An eternity later morning came, and he smeared the sleep off his face with his only working hand. A nurse arrived shortly afterwards to raise his cot and place a tray of breakfast on his lap. Thankfully finding Harry still deep in blissful sleep, he ate his eggs and toast peacefully, caring not in the least for the lack of salt or butter. Someone had finally deigned to update the wall-clock, and he found that it was a quarter past eight in the morning.
Shortly after nine o’clock a senior nurse arrived, gave him a nervous smile and began to search through a transparent plastic bag beside his bed that contained a tattered and bloody uniform. Finding a nametag there, she carefully cleaned and read it before apologizing to him and exiting the room in a hurry.
Something struck the back of his head and a crumpled piece of paper ricocheted towards an intermediate nurses’ station, earning them a rebuking glare from the squat nurse who was nesting there. Toni turned to find a very alert Harry leaning towards him. Suppressing his despair at the prospect of another neck-ache, he smiled and leaned towards his neighbor, only to have the boy slip him a folded piece of paper. Toni read the message there and felt his heart begin to gather speed.
THAT IS THE SECOND TIME THEY’VE GONE THROUGH YOUR STUFF! THEY KEEP CHECKING OUT YOUR NAMETAG, AND THEY’VE BEEN WHISPERING LIKE THERE’S TROUBLE. WHAT’S GOING ON?
Not trusting himself to whisper low enough, he requested his mate’s marker and scribbled a quick answer.
PROBABLY IN TROUBLE! GOT A LITTLE POISON PILL IN MY UNIT WHO WANT’S TO DO ME IN. CAN YOU WALK?
Harry nodded and, following Toni’s gestures, he limped towards the foot of the cadet’s bed and discreetly removed the chart that had been hung there. As he handed it towards him, Toni mouthed a very genuine word of thanks and then carefully inspected the untidily scrawled document.
An EWAC soldier by the name of Frederic Granger was apparently into his fourth day of internment after having suffered traumatic injuries during combat. The soldier’s right arm had suffered significant tissue damage, and had already been subjected to corrective surgery. Aside from that, the patient had suffered penetrating wounds from more than two hundred incandescent spalls into his upper and lower body (presumably originating from the interior surface of a Suit’s armor), which had had to be removed before stem-cell netting could be applied over his burned skin. The patient had suffered a multitude of hematomas due to his Suit’s straps, a severe concussion that by itself would require at least three weeks of convalescence, and damage of unknown seriousness to his hearing.
The patient also happened to possess a deep incisive wound to the right side of his face, although it appeared to have healed well enough to not require further treatment.
The injuries were very familiar, as was their origin, but the name was not. And then Toni remembered what he had done before going into combat against the Bakemono; he had garbed the previous occupant’s uniform over his own to protect his body from the interface’s punishing straps. Carefully he sat up and removed the plastic bag with his belongings from beneath the nightstand. Searching its interior, he found a torn and blood-spattered dolmen and inspected its nametag. It read Frederic Granger A+.
Toni thanked the gods that the soldier’s blood-type was the same as his. Searching beneath its tortured fabric, he found his own dolmen and removed the Velcro nametag with his true identity as discreetly as possible. The gesture did not pass unnoticed by Harry. He hurriedly scribbled message onto another piece of paper.
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IS YOUR NAME TONI MIURA?
Toni’s world began to tilt to the side. He had been too cautious about it for Harry to be able to read his nametag, which was now carefully hidden away in his hospital-supplied underclothes. He took the paper from the soldier and wrote a quick answer.
YES. HOW DID YOU KNOW?
MP SHOWED UP HERE WHILE YOU WERE KO, LOOKING FOR A TONI MIURA.
MP?
MILITARY POLICE. THEY WERE LOOKING FOR YOU!
And that was that for him. There was only one thing left to do, and that was to find Ian and kill him before he lost his chance for good. His mind began to work frantically through all the options at his disposal. A nurse’s arrival interrupted his thoughts.
“Corporal, could I have a quick word?”
“Y-yes, nurse,” he replied.
“We’re having problems registering your name into our database, apparently there’s another Frederic Granger in our patient list, he had a work-related stroke a few days ago. Could you please confirm your name?” she kindly asked him.
Thinking hard, Toni threw himself at the only door he could find.
“My name is Raymond Rosa, I’m a Sergeant-cadet from LOGIS, MEWAC. I was using Granger’s uniform for lack of my own, I’m sorry ...” he lied.
She brightened up immediately and thanked him for his cooperation before taking her leave.
Belatedly he turned towards Harry to find him shaking his head disapprovingly. The boy took up the piece of paper again and scribbled furiously.
HOW MANY NAMES DO YOU HAVE, ANYWAY?? BUT THAT PROBABLY WON’T WORK. THEIR DATABASE IS ON THE GMN. IF THE GUY WHO’S NAME YOU GAVE IS SOMEWHERE ELSE OR MISSING, THEY’LL KNOW!
Missing!
Ray was dead, but he was probably listed as missing. He had just bought himself minutes, not days! Hurriedly he thanked a bewildered Harry and carefully stood on his feet, finding that even his soles hurt. Grimacing with the pain, he checked to make sure that no one was looking, and then set off like any other patient with a need to pee would; with great care and greater urgency.
Exiting the compartment, he found himself in a wide corridor. He turned towards what appeared to be the building’s exit, a well-illuminated atrium with a reception to one side and four men on the other, MP written into their armbands in capital letters. Toni about-faced and followed the corridor in the opposite direction, coming across a lavatory populated with a pair of peeing patients. He occupied a stall as they did their business, thinking hard. His mind remained sluggish, however, and he realized that he didn’t even know whether he had the strength for what needed to be done.
The pair finally left the room and he exited the stall nervously. Acting on a whim, he quickly locked the lavatory from the inside and proceeded to open the window. After several failed attempts it finally opened with a clang, and the compartment’s interior was suddenly invaded by a whirlwind.
Only a fool would venture outside with the wind so strong and a body so frail, but a fool was he, and he sat his rump on the sill and pivoted his legs over with great effort. His hospital skirt suddenly blew into his face, his hidden nametag magically slipping out of his breeches and over his head to strike against the lavatory door.
Moving feet were clearly visible beneath it.
Cursing loudly, barely managing to hear the words due to the wind, Toni jumped out and fell the half-meter that separated him from the medical bay’s grassy grounds. Unable to keep his footing, he purposely fell on his left shoulder to lessen the damage. The pain, however, was terribly severe, and he knew that somewhere he was bleeding again.
Can’t you do anything without bleeding?
He remembered Hannah and wondered if she had survived the engagement, the real possibility that she might be dead agonizing him more than the pain. Suppressing the thought, he carefully stood and stepped into the buffeting wind, peering at his surroundings and trying to situate himself from what he remembered when he had last been there.
LOGIS had spent most of its time in the perimeter of Lograin’s airfield, and so he searched for that first. To his left were a few buildings, some of them derelict, and then a fence and the shifting forest beyond. He turned to his right and shuffled towards a group of taller buildings blocking his view of whatever lay beyond. Lowering his center-of-mass as if he were driving an armored Suit, he leaned into the wind and moved towards the buildings, desperately hoping that he wasn’t being watched.
Feeling the chilly wind suck all the heat from his body, Toni began to regret not having remained in the warmth of his hospital bed. He might even have gladly accepted being arrested just to stay warm and safe.
Then he imagined the firing squad and the little smile on Ian’s face as he watched, and knew the cold was preferable to that. Not because of his execution, of course. It was the smile that bothered him, that cruel, un-empathetic, superior smile of his that said everything about what really went on inside the traitor’s mind. He could not bear to see that smile again. Colonel Tora was dead and who in hell knew if the Bakemono was dead or not, but if he was going to face a firing squad, it would be while savoring the memory of sitting on the traitor’s chest, grinning like an idiot as he cut his senior’s pale throat.
The wind changed as he closed in on the nearest building, and instead of fighting against his advance, it began to push him towards the darkened edifice. There was no sign of activity inside, and as he stumbled towards an imposing pair of solid wooden doors, he chanced a quick look towards the medical bay. There was no sign of activity at its exterior.
Momentarily encouraged, he twisted the door’s knob only to find it solidly locked. Kicking it in was beyond serious consideration.
Fighting the wind, Toni rounded the building and soon found himself on a wide abandoned avenue. Finding another locked door, he lost his patience, found a hefty rock and tossed it towards one of the ground-floor windows. The projectile struck the glass and it fractured, retaining its integrity only due to the thick protective film that covered it. The abetting wind did the rest, and under the gale’s relentless force, the pane finally caved in and flew into the building’s interior. The sudden “whoomp!” it made as it disappeared would have attracted much attention on any other season of the month. Today the noise was almost entirely drowned out by the winds.
Grunting with the effort, Toni pulled himself onto the window sill and forced his legs over it, the strong wind helping to forcefully vault him into what appeared to be an office compartment. He struck the ground hard and began to roll slowly across the cluttered floor, moaning in agony as the invading whirlwind sent papers flying into the air around him. Once the pain had subsided, Toni stood and tried the only door, finding it unlocked. Opening it carefully, he peered out through the crack to find only a central corridor bordered by windows to his left and closed office doors to his right.
Closing the door behind him, Toni limped along the pristine corridor, its cleanliness an assault on his senses after weeks of blood and grime. Quietly he paced its length, still expecting some caretaker to appear as he passed a succession of sealed doors, until he came upon an elaborately decorated entrance hall, its double-doors the same ones he had attempted to open minutes before. The hall was flanked by a wide staircase that allowed access to the floors above. Tiredly he gazed at those steps, wondering if he had the strength.
Finally coming to a decision, he began to carefully climb the flights, calmly allowing the stranger to take the helm as he did so. Upon reaching a floor, he peered at his surroundings, sniffed the air, and then kept climbing.
On the fifth and final floor, the stranger sniffed something that caught its attention. The floor was dirtier but well trodden, and most tracks led off to the corridor to his left. Following them, he eventually came upon several doors deep inside the building. The nearest was unlocked, and he opened the door and walked inside.
He found himself inside a workshop clearly meant for building maintenance and repair, its interior clad with weapons of diverse size
and weight. On another day it might have been a toolshed, but to the stranger’s eyes it was an armory. He searched the compartment’s walls for anything both compact and deadly, and slowly came to the realization that he would need a cutting instrument to fit the part. He ruffled through several desk drawers, coming upon his first box-cutter. Before long he held four in his newly grimed hands. Two he discarded for being too fragile to hold up in a fight. A third, already well-used, he reserved for an emergency. The fourth, a wickedly sharp blade about twelve centimeters long when fully extended, became his weapon of choice.
He imagined it covered in blood, and willed it to become so. His sweet mother of Galician descent had once told him of an ancient god her far-off ancestors had prayed to in times of war. Its name was Cosus, if he wasn’t mistaken. Hoping he had remembered the name correctly, he held the weapon between his palms and prayed to the non-existent god, pouring all his hate into the weapon in his hands. He had never done anything even remotely similar before, but it felt right, and it settled his mind and heart enough to accept what needed to be done, and what he would probably have to sacrifice in order to achieve it.
He had already wasted all his life-points against the Bakemono. He accepted that as he stood in the center of the workshop, and it brought him peace.
His peace was rudely broken by a rifle-butt to the head. The sudden impact drove him almost to the ground but, lowering his center-of-mass having become his first instinct when attacked, he buckled his knees, laying both hands on the floor before snapping his head over his shoulder to scrutinize his assailant.
His adversaries were two well-armed MPs, the looks their eyes making it clear they knew that they had found the missing cadet. The sergeant spoke, but Toni didn’t hear the words. Instead he observed both soldiers as they covered his only exit. Their uniforms were characteristically black, their berets navy-blue, their Lacraus strapped to a diagonal leather shoulder-belt that clipped onto a waist-belt, and upon which a sidearm rested in its holster. But Toni didn’t care about that. They wore high leather gloves that covered the tendons at their wrists and much of their forearms, and the only adequate remaining target was their exposed throats. Toni cared about that. And there was a rifle between him and his nearest foe’s throat, its strap not long enough to turn against his second adversary without first having to waste a precious moment to cut the bond.
Slowly he relaxed his body, realizing he must certainly be raising red flags in the MPs’ minds. He shook his head, trying to force himself into thinking.
“What do you mean, no? On the ground or I’ll pop you. This is your last warning!” the sergeant ordered.
Turning his head slowly towards his superior, Toni smiled, finding it appropriate that he’d already managed to put in a prayer. He hadn’t managed to see or hear any more soldiers beyond the room, and he no longer had any expectation that there would be. He stared hard at the sergeant as the soldier’s nose flared at his target’s non-compliance, and saw only swine there. The sergeant’s lacrau was a compact weapon with a bull-pup design, meant for movement and combat in tight spaces, but that was going to work in Toni’s favor.
Springing into action, Toni grabbed the rifle in his right hand and launched himself towards the sergeant, managing to leap-frog his hand forwards to grab his adversary’s shoulder-belt as his left slipped the box-cutter’s blade out of its handle.
Easy does it, now.
He leaned hard into the sergeant and sent him thudding against his corporal, and his left hand snaked along his foe’s torso until the blade nestled against the straining muscles of his neck. The sergeant gave a squeal and fired off a burst, but then the corporal slammed against the corridor wall and all three came to a sudden halt. Toni began to push the blade in, the ease with which the steel suddenly entered the sergeant’s throat shocking him enough to make him pause momentarily, his adversary squealing and kicking as he pleaded for his life. Toni then began to cut more deliberately, putting more power behind the act, until the blade suddenly dug entirely in and laid bare the left and center of his foe’s throat. The sergeant fired off a long, impotent burst from his Lacrau and wood splinters flew, its barrel snugly secured beneath Toni’s armpit as the sergeant’s horrendous wound gave up its treasure. Blood poured in hot jets against Toni’s surprised face, flowing into his mouth as his jaw fell open at the affront, fat drops spraying heavily against the wall and the corporal’s struggling body with every generous spout.
The sergeant released his weapon and clapped his hands against his throat, and the panicking corporal, pinned into a sitting position by his superior’s weight, tried to throw the body over his knee and deploy his rifle.
Toni laid his knee on the weapon and pushed it down, and then placed his blade against the soldier’s throat and held it there with both hands, shock and horror briefly freezing his muscles in place.
“I’m sorry! I’m sorry! I’m so sorry, man. Just let me go. I won’t tell, OK? OK?!” the corporal pleaded as his senior rolled over the tiled floor beside him.
The soldier had a cleft chin, and it was clean-shaven despite him having the look of someone whose beard grew thickly. His dark hair had recently seen a pair of scissors. His eyes were wide and leaking, and his eyebrows were crushed together and reaching for the sky, his eyes possessing the pitiful expression of one who had just learned how one died by the blade. The soldier was well into his twenties, but in that moment he sounded clearly like a child, and Toni pitied and hated him for that.
“I’m sorry ...” Toni answered sadly, and with a sudden snap of his body, he opened the man’s throat.
Blood sprayed everywhere, momentarily blinding him, and as his adversary clutched the gaping wound and began to roll beneath him, Toni felt a hand take hold of his shoulder. He stared at the large hand, painted red with its owner’s blood, and he had a flash of a bloody armored Suit with a corpse hanging from its gorget. Turning to face the sergeant, he found the man stooping over him, Lacrau hanging loosely from its strap as the soldier used his free hand to plug the wound. The hand appeared almost sunk into his throat, but the expression on his face was tragic, and it spoke words the man could no longer utter. He fell upon Toni’s kneeling form and vomited a gush of blood upon him, and then he lay down where his dying subordinate thrashed and took him in his arms.
A minute passed by as Toni, sitting numbly with his back against the corridor’s wall, watched them bleed to death. The two men held each other tightly until the sergeant ceased to move, and then the corporal released himself from his superior’s limp grasp, huddled into a corner, and died alone. Before long there were no more sucking and choking sounds, and silence became bliss.
It was a while before Toni finally realized he was crying, and he continued to do so for a time.
A long while later, Toni’s breathing became regular and he stopped spitting compulsively to rid himself of the taste of the fallen soldiers’ blood. He decided that he had learned something new about himself. He was most certainly not a born killer. What he had done horrified him, left him disgusted with himself. The emotion was so powerful that he found himself trying to smother it, before the horror could smother him.
Obeying a sudden urge to not look upon the corpses, he abandoned the corridor and took refuge in the workshop. Standing before a mirror fixed into the wall over a tiny lavatory, he stared at his reflection, newly horrified by what he saw. There were places where blood hadn’t smeared, but they were no wider than a coin’s breadth. His hair had become stuck to his skull, and he had what he could only call a blood-beard, where the blood soaked up by his two week-old fuzz had begun to clot. He looked into his own eyes, but quickly averted them as a potent wave of shame nearly overcame him. Slowly he began to wash his face, and then his hair and neck, until finally he began to carefully peel off his clothing and bandages, layer by layer.
He finally stood naked and decidedly cleaner, and he inspected his injuries against a mirror that had become speckled with drops of diluted blood
. He realized he was fortunate in that the MPs had not put up a more considerable resistance. His right arm was bleeding from the corner of a half-healed surgical incision above his elbow, although it wasn’t even a trickle compared to what he had witnessed some minutes before, and the medical weaving that covered much of his chest, abdomen, groin and thighs seemed to require the bandages he had just removed to prevent infection. Every injured surface that had suffered compression ached terribly, and he realized that he was possibly bleeding beneath the affected skin as well.
That wouldn’t make any difference, though.
Covering up his crime was pointless, except in the interest of widening his window of opportunity to find and engage the special one. His injuries weren’t a problem either, since it would probably take days for any infection to do him in.
Finding an oil-stained overall inside a beaten locker, Toni put it on and pocketed his box-cutters. There was also a dirty sweatshirt and he donned it as well, ignoring the fact that it was in direct contact with the stem-cell matting that covered his injured flesh. Discovering a tough old pair of work-shoes hidden deep in the locker, he put them on without socks and found that they fit snugly.
Taking a moment to settle his emotions, he then walked out into the corridor and was struck by a powerful smell to accompany the vista. It was an odd smell, not foul but nauseating nevertheless, and he knew where it came from due to his stints at his father’s farm. Blood pooled around the deceased soldiers’ bodies, and had begun to clot. He approached them and the odor of clotting blood intensified, but eventually he realized he could deal with it.
Toni searched through their pockets and shut down every electronic device he could find, including their watches. He unstrapped the less bloody of the two rifles and then stowed it along with two spare magazines into a rucksack he had found, before finally removing the pistol from the sergeant’s holster, taking note that his nametag read Luco Varano O -.
The pistol, a semiautomatic Miroku in eight millimeter Short caliber, had a twenty-four round magazine for a loaded weight of 480 grams, each round leaving the weapon’s barrel at a blistering Capicuan mach two; if he couldn’t get the job done with that, then he deserved to fail.
He checked the weapon and found the chamber clear and the magazine full. Feeling that the situation called for it, he racked the slide, chambering a round before placing the weapon on safety. The pistol found a noble place in the overall’s front pocket.
Before turning off their digital watches, Toni had noticed that it was only eleven. It shocked him. Less than two hours ago he had been lying on a hospital bed, sated and content.
He wondered whether the two soldiers had informed their superiors which building they had entered. The reasons why they had entered in the first place seemed clear to him already; they had been searching for a missing patient and had found a broken window on the ground floor of the nearest building. That would have been enough for him to radio in, had he been in their shoes.
That helped him to make up his mind. Leaving the building was vital, the chances of having a run-in with another patrol being simply too high. He would find somewhere to hide and rest until nineteen hundred hours, since he could reasonably expect most base personnel at that hour to be at the canteen, along with a considerable percentage of those on duty.
Donning a dirty air-force cap and shouldering the rucksack, Toni exited the building gingerly from the vacant window. Holding onto his new head-covering lest the powerful wind blow it away, he moved slowly among the buildings and away from the nearby medical bay, reminding himself repeatedly that he was now a base maintenance technician. His mind kept returning to the two dead bodies that lay behind him. He had taken the time to read the corporal’s nametag, finding to his dismay that the man had been named Toni Nievers.
It was the first time he had ever killed a human being, and the stranger within was perhaps no longer as mysterious as it had once been, although it was certainly more silent for the moment. Perhaps it was just as shocked as Toni was. Either way, Toni was more committed than ever to his goal.
He came upon an abandoned building that flanked a deactivated runway, its dilapidated structure three floors tall and its top flat and out of sight. That suited him just fine. Entering carefully through a vacant space that had once been furnished with doors, Toni climbed the closed staircase inside, ignoring the crepitating shudder every time a stronger gust shook the building, until he came upon a rusting metal door. Pushing it open to a loud creaking sound, he stepped back into the wind and then closed the door securely, jamming several pieces of broken concrete beneath it to ensure no one would be able to open it from the inside.
He walked onto a roof that allowed him a fair view of the central part of Lograin air base. Barely registering that view, the powerful wind forcing him to shield his eyes, he plodded instead towards what appeared to be an empty shed at the roof’s nearest corner. It consisted of two-by-two meters of dirt-covered floor, but Toni didn’t care; it was all a murderer needed for sleep, any convict in Leiben’s Central Presidiary Facility could vouch for that.