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标 题: Robotech: Genesis CHAPTER ONE
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (2001年12月18日12:29:56 星期二), 转信
CHAPTER ONE
I had misgivings like everybody else, but I thought (the appearance of SDF-1
) just might be a good thing for the human race after all when I saw how it
scared hell outta the politicians.
Remark attributed to Lt. (jg) Roy Fokker in Prelude to Doomsday: A History o
f the Global Civil War, by Malachi Cain
When the dimensional fortress landed in 1999 A.D., the word "miracle" had be
en so long overused that it took some time for the human race to realize tha
t a real one had indeed come to pass.
In the late twentieth century, "miracle" had become the commonplace descript
ion for home appliances and food additives. Then came the Global Civil War,
a rapid spiraling of diverse conflicts that, by 1994, was well on its way to
becoming a full-scale worldwide struggle; in the very early days of the war
, "miracle" was used by either side to represent any highly encouraging batt
le news.
The World Unification Alliance came into existence because it seemed the bes
t hope for human survival. But its well-meaning reformers found that a hundr
ed predators rose up to savage them: from supranational conglomerates, relig
ious extremists, and followers of a hundred different ideologies to racists
and bigots of every stripe.
The war bogged down, balkanized dragged on, igniting every corner of the pla
net. People forgot the word "miracle." The war escalated and escalated-gradu
ally, it's true, but everyone knew what the final escalation would be-until
hope began to die.
And in a way nobody seemed to be able to stop, the human race moved along th
e path to its own utter obliteration, using weapons of its own fashioning. T
he life of the planet was infinitely precious, but no one could formulate a
plan to save it from the sacrificial thermonuclear fire.
Then, almost ten years into the Global Civil War, the thinking of Homo sapie
ns changed forever.
The dimensional fortress's arrival was a coincidence beyond coincidence and,
in the beginning, a sobering catastrophe.
Its entry was that of a powered object, and it had appeared from nowhere, fr
om some unfathomable rift in the timespace continuum. Its long descent sprea
d destruction and death as its shock waves and the after-blast of its monume
ntal drive leveled cities, deafened and blinded multitudes, made a furnace o
f the atmosphere, and somehow awakened tectonic forces. Cities burned and fe
ll, and many, many died.
Its approach rattled the world. The mosques were crowded to capacity and bey
ond, as were the temples and the churches. Many people committed suicide, an
d, curiously enough, the three most notable high-casualty-rate categories we
re, in this order: fundamentalist clergy, certain elected politicians, and m
ajor figures in the entertainment world. Speculation about their motives-tha
t the thing they had in common was that they felt diminished by the arrival
of the alien spacecraft-remained just that: speculation.
At last the object slowed, obviously damaged but still capable of maneuverin
g. Its astonishing speed lessened to a mere glide-except that it had little
in the way of lifting surfaces and was unthinkably heavy. It came to rest on
a gently sloping plain on a small island in the South Pacific, once the sit
e of French atomic tests, called Macross.
The plain was long and broad, especially for such a tiny island, but it was
not a great deal longer than the ship itself. A few hundred yards behind its
thrusters, waves crashed against the beach. A short distance ahead of its r
uined bow were sheer cliffs.
Its outer sheath and first layers of armor, and a great portion of the super
structure, had been damaged in the course of its escape, or in the controlle
d crash of its landing. It groaned and creaked, cooling, as the combers foam
ed and bashed the sand on an otherwise idyllic day on Macross Island.
The human race began assessing the damage in a dazed, uncoordinated way. But
it didn't take long for opposing forces to convince themselves that the cra
sh was no enemy trick.
For the first few hours, it was called "the Visitor." Leaders of the various
factions of the civil war, their presumed importance reduced by the alien v
essel's appearance, took hasty steps toward a truce of convenience. The vari
ous commanders had to move quickly and had to sacrifice much of their presti
ge to accommodate one another; all eyes were turned to the sky and to Macros
s Island. The Global Civil War looked like a minor, ludicrous squabble compa
red to the awesome power that had just made itself felt on Earth.
Within hours, preparations were being made for an expedition to explore the
wreckage. Necessary alliances were struck, but safety factors were built int
o the expeditionary force. Enemies at the top had accomplished an uneasy pea
ce.
Now, those who'd fought the war would have to do the same.
The flight deck of the Gibraltar-class aircraft carrier Kenosha retreated be
neath the ascending helicopter, a comforting artificial island of nonskid la
nding surface. Lieutenant (jg) Roy Fokker watched it unhappily, resigning hi
mself to the mission at hand.
He turned to the man piloting the helo, Colonel T.R. Edwards, who was flying
the chopper with consummate skill. Roy Fokker was more used to those occasi
ons when he and Edwards were doing turns-and-burns, trying to shoot each oth
er out of the skies.
Roy Fokker was an Internationalist, right down to his soles. His uniform bor
e the colors of his carrier aviation unit, a fighter squadron: the Jolly Rog
er skull-and-crossbones insignia. The colors were from the old United States
Navy, the renowned and justly feared VF-84 squadron off the USS Nimitz that
had hunted the skies in F-14 Tomcats, then Z-6 Executioners, right up to Ro
y's own production-line-new Z-9A Peregrine.
Roy wished he was back there in his own jet, in his own cockpit.
For so important a takeoff, it would have been normal to see the Kenosha's s
kipper on the observation deck under phased-array radar antenna and other to
wer shrubbery-the deck the aviators called Vulture's Row. Admiral Hayes and
the other heavy-hitters were all there, but Captain Henry Gloval wasn't. Tod
ay, Captain Henry Gloval was belted in the rear of the helo with a platoon o
f marines and some techs and more scientific equipment and weapons than Roy
had seen packed into a bird before. That the Old Man should actually leave h
is command and go ashore showed how topsy-turvy this spaceship or whatever i
t was had turned matters on Earth.
It was as oddball a mission as Roy had ever seen; it made him uncharacterist
ically nervous, especially since the opposition junta had picked Edwards as
its representative on the team.
The last time Edwards and Roy had crossed contrails, Edwards had been in the
hire of something called the Northeast Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere. There wa
s no telling who he was really working for now, except that he was always, w
ithout exception, out to benefit Colonel T.R. Edwards.
Roy told himself to stop thinking about it and do his job. He fidgeted in hi
s seat a little, uncomfortable in web gear weighted with about a hundred rou
nds of weapons, ammo, and survival and exploration equipment.
He pushed his unruly mop of blond hair back out of his eyes. He wasn't sure
why or when long hairstyles had become the norm among pilots, but now it was
practically de rigueur. Some Samurai tradition?
He glanced over at Edwards. The mercenary was perhaps thirty, ten years olde
r than Roy, with the same lean height. Edwards had tan good-looks and sun-bl
eached hair and a killer smile. He seemed to be enjoying himself.
Roy's youth didn't make him Edwards's inferior in combat experience or exper
tise. The practical philosophy of the old-time Swiss and Israelis and others
like them was now the rule: Anyone who could fly well did, and they flew as
leaders if they merited it, regardless of age or rank.
All the tea-party proprieties about a flyer needing a college education and
years of training had been thrown out as the attrition of the war made them
untenable. Roy had heard that kids as young as fourteen were in the new clas
ses at Aerial Combat School.
Edwards had caught the glance. "Want to take over, Fokker? Be my guest."
"No thanks, Colonel. I'm just here to make sure you don't mess up and spike
us into the drink."
Edwards laughed. "Fokker, know what your problem is? You take this war stuff
too personally."
"Tell me something: D'you like flying for a bunch of fascists?"
Edwards snorted derisively. "You think there's that much difference between
sides, after ten years of war? Besides, the Neasians pay me more in a week t
han you make in a year."
Roy wanted to answer that, but his orders were to avoid friction with Edward
s. As if to remind him of that, a sudden aroma wafted under his nose. It was
pipe tobacco, but to Roy it always smelled like a soap factory on fire.
Gloval was at it again. But how do you tell your commanding officer that he'
s breaking regs, smoking aboard an aircraft? If you are a wise young lieuten
ant (jg), you do not.
Roy turned back to study Macross and forgot Gloval, Edwards, and everything
else. There lay the blackened remains of a ship like nothing Earth had ever
seen before.
"Great God!" Roy said slowly, and even Edwards had nothing to add.
The wreck was cool, and radiation readings were about normal. Previous fly-b
ys hadn't drawn fire or seen any activity. The helo set down a few dozen yar
ds from the scorched, broken ruin. In another few moments the team was offlo
ading itself and its equipment.
Gloval, a tall, rangy man with a soot-black, Stalinesque mustache, captain's
hat tilted forward on his brow, was establishing security and getting ready
for preliminary external examination of the wreckage. He was square-shoulde
red and vigorous, looking younger than his fifty-odd years until one saw the
lines around his eyes.
But while the preparations were going on, Lance Corporal Murphy, always itch
ing to be on the move, couldn't resist doing a little snooping. "Hey, lookit
! I think I found a hatch!"
Gloval's voice still retained its heavy Russian accent. "You jackass! Get aw
ay from there!"
Murphy was standing near a tall circular feature in the battered hull, wavin
g them over. With his back to it, he didn't see the middle of the hatch open
, the halves sliding apart. He couldn't hear his teammates' shouted warnings
, as several long, segmented metal tentacles snaked out.
In another moment, the unlucky marine was caught and lifted off his feet. Th
e service automatic in his hand went off, then fell from his grasp, as he wa
s yanked within. None of the others dared to shoot for fear of hitting him.
The hatch snapped shut. Gloval spread his arms to hold back Roy and some of
the others; they would have charged for the hatch. "Stand where you are and
hold your fire! Nobody goes any closer until we know what we're dealing with
!"
An hour later things had changed, although the explorers didn't know much mo
re than they had at the beginning.
At Admiral Hayes's insistence, Doctor Emil Lang had been choppered ashore to
supervise. Lang was Earth's premier mind, by decree of Hayes and Senator Ru
sso and the others in the alliance leadership, the final authority on interp
lanetary etiquette.
Lang ordered everyone into anticontamination suits, then directed a human-si
ze drone robot to make preliminary exploration of the ship. When the robot,
essentially a bulbous detector/telemetry package on two legs, stopped dead i
n front of the hatch as the hatch reopened, Lang looked thoughtful.
The robot refused to respond to further commands, the hatch stayed open, and
there was no sign of activity within. Lang's eyes narrowed behind his suit'
s visor as he concentrated.
Lang was a man just under medium height, slight of build, but when it came t
o puzzling out the unknown, he had the courage of a lion. Disregarding his o
rders, he directed Gloval to select a party to explore the wreck. Gloval pic
ked himself, Roy, Edwards, and eight of the grunts.
"Get those spotlights on," Lang instructed. "And you may chamber a round in
your weapons, but leave the safeties on. If anyone fires without my direct o
rder, I'll see that he's court-martialed and hung."
Unnoticed, T.R. Edwards made a wry face inside his suit helmet and flicked h
is submachine gun selector over to full auto.
The lights they'd brought-spotlights mounted on the shoulders of their web g
ear-were powerful but not powerful enough to reach the farthest limits of th
e compartment in which they found themselves. Lang and Gloval only studied w
hat was before them, but from the others were soft exclamations, curses, obs
cenities.
It resembled a complex cityscape. The alien equipment and machinery was made
of glassy alloys and translucent materials, with conduitlike structures cri
sscrossing in midair and oddly shaped contrivances in every direction. The s
pacecraft was built to a monumental scale.
Readings still indicated no danger from radiation, atmospheric, or biologica
l contamination; they removed the suits.
"We will divide into two groups," Gloval decided, still in charge of the tac
tical decisions. "Roy, you'll take four marines. Dr. Lang, Edwards-you'll be
in my group."
They were to work their way forward, following opposite sides of the wreck's
inner hull, in an attempt to link up in the bow. Failing that, they would o
bserve as much as possible and fall back to their original point of entry in
one hour.
They started off. No one heard the inert probe robot suddenly reactivate and
step through the open hatch in their wake, moving more nimbly than it had a
few minutes before.
Fifteen minutes later, in a passageway as high and wide as a stadium, Roy pa
used to shine his shoulder-mounted lights around him. "This place must be pl
aying tricks on my eyes. Does it look to you like the walls're moving?" he a
sked the gunnery sergeant behind him.
The gunny said slowly, "Yeah, kinda. Like there's a fog or somethin' flowin'
through all the nooks and crannies."
Roy was about to get them moving again when he heard someone calling softly,
"Caruthers. Hey, man, where y' at?"
Caruthers was the man walking drag at the rear of the file; they all turned
back to see what was going on. Caruthers had fallen far behind for some reas
on; but he was rejoining them, his spots getting nearer. But something about
the man's movement wasn't normal. Moreover, his head hung limply and he app
eared to be moving considerably above them, as if on a catwalk.
They flashed their beams his way and stood rooted in astonishment and stark
terror. Caruthers's body hung on a line, like a tiny puppet, held in the han
d of a humanoid metal monster seventy feet tall.
The armored behemoth swung its free hand in their direction. They didn't hav
e time for permission to react; they wouldn't have listened if Lang had deni
ed it, anyway.
Roy and the gunny and the other marines opened fire, the chatter of their su
bmachine guns loud in their ears.
Their tracers lit up the darkness, as the bullets bounced off the monster's
armor as if they were paper clips.
Its right hand loosed a stream of reddish-orange fury. A marine disappeared
like a zapped bug, turned to ash in an instant.
--
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