Behemoth: Rise Of Mankind Book 1 (16 page)

BOOK: Behemoth: Rise Of Mankind Book 1
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***

 

              Lieutenant Richard Martin and Lieutenant Kelly Parson drew escort duty for a medical shuttle. Panthers Seven and Eight respectively, they were the newest members of the team, which was likely why they got the crap duty. They sidled up to the hangar, waiting for their charge to deploy for the quick trip over to the Silver Star.

              “Hey, Kel,” Richard said, “you ever think we’d be in an actual fight like this?”

              “Yeah,” Kelly replied. “I knew the enemy would be back.”

              “I didn’t. I figured why bother? We kicked their asses before. Why come back?”

              “No one went and told the bad guys we won, you realize that, right?”

              Richard paused. “I…didn’t think about that. But shouldn’t it be all the scarier? When your people don’t return, wouldn’t you assume the worst? We sure did with our probes beyond the Solar System.”

              “We always intended to follow up though.”

              “True that.” Richard checked his scans. The enemy seemed to be holding their ground. “I guess they don’t want any more today.”

              “They’ll be back in,” Kelly replied. “Revente’s briefing proves it. Whatever damage we inflicted might already be repaired. The final fight’s going to be rough and I promise you this, it’ll start suddenly.”

              “You’re all sunshine and rainbows, Kel.” Richard shook his head. “A real motivator.”

              “I just like to keep it real, pal.” Kelly went silent for a moment. “They’re launching the shuttle.”

              A moment later, the medical craft left the Behemoth and gunned the throttle, heading for the Silver Star. Kelly and Richard took up flanking positions slightly behind it, following at a reasonable distance. They established a communication link and Richard gave them some brief instructions.

              “Don’t get too far ahead. We’re not going to land with you but when you’re ready to take off, let us know. We’ll watch your six.”

              “Appreciate the protection, Panthers Seven and Eight. Glad to have you around.”

              “We’re here for you,” Kelly replied. “Just stay focused.”

              Richard watched his sensors like a hawk, waiting for an attack he hoped would never come. Hardly twenty seconds away, many other Behemoth fighters patrolled the area. If they got into real trouble, reinforcements were a quick jaunt away. Meagan made it clear the bad guys wanted the Silver Star for some reason. It dawned on him a medical shuttle carrying a survivor might just be a target too ripe not to pick.

              The trip between ships took less than three minutes. The medical shuttle disappeared into the hangar, leaving Richard and Kelly to circle around and prepare for the trip back. Loading the patient shouldn’t take too long. No more than five minutes he figured but probably less. Then they’d start back and the short but stressful escort duty would be over.

             
Then back to patrol
.

              “Panther Seven and Eight, this is Med One. We are securing the patient for transport. Estimated departure time, twenty seconds.”

             
Even faster than I thought. Fantastic. Come on! Let’s go!

              “Hey,” Kelly broke his thoughts. “I’m picking up some readings heading in fast.”

              “What do you mean?” Richard checked his scans. “I don’t see…wait…there they are.”

              “Uh huh. Must be fighters.”

              “They’re several minutes out,” Richard replied. “Plenty of time to get this shuttle back if we hurry.”

              “Panther Five, this is Panther Eight,” Kelly announced. “Can you bring Panther Six over here? We might have a problem.”

              “What’s up?” Leslie Eddings, Panther Five, answered. “We’re patrolling grid three-two-seven.”

              “Pretty sure they’re more worried about getting this patient back to the Behemoth than the nothing you guys are finding in grid whatever,” Kelly said. “Hurry up. We don’t want to face down a bunch of fighters with this shuttle in tow. It’s about to take off.”

              “Okay, okay,” Leslie replied. “We’re on our way.”

             
Good call
, Richard thought.
Still, it shouldn’t matter. We’ll have these guys home in no time.

              “This is Med One, launching now.” The shuttle left the hangar and plunged toward the Behemoth at top speed. Richard and Kelly fell in beside it, easily catching up. Enemy fighters were closing in, picking up speed. Sensors estimated they’d overtake them
before
they reached the Behemoth.

              “Crap.” Richard sighed. “Do you see that, Kel?”

              “Yeah,” Kel acknowledged. “Leslie, prepare for a real fight. These jerks are almost on us after all.”

              “Fantastic. Do you have a number?”

              “Not an accurate one,” Kelly replied. “At least four…but probably more. They like to fly tight to avoid scan confirmation.”

              “This is Med One, we are raising our shields.” This meant they’d be slowing down significantly. Holding off the fighters would not be sufficient. They’d have to take them out. A couple lucky shots would be all the enemy needed to destroy the shuttle. Protecting them would be a pain.

              Richard sent a ping to Kelly, indicating he felt they should engage. She sent back an acknowledgement then let Panthers Five and Six know to catch up. Six committed to staying by Med One. Three fighters against whatever the enemy threw at them seemed like good odds. After all, they took down so many of them earlier.

              “Visual!” Richard shouted. “Contact! Six total fighters.”

              “Great, and we’re only bringing four…” Kelly sighed. “I hope you’re ready for some crazy cause we’ve got it.”

              Richard pulled to the right and banked hard. Kelly went the opposite direction. They’d practiced the tactic a thousand times in simulation and training exercises. Earlier, they learned just how effective their unorthodox maneuver was against this particular enemy. Since they didn’t seem to operate under the wingman mentality the humans trained for.

              Coordination and cooperation went a long way and meant a lot more than numbers.

              At least, Richard hoped so.

              The enemy broke ranks, twisting away from their loose formation to meet the fighters. Others plunged straight for the shuttle, fully intent on annihilating it. “Um, Kelly do you see that?”

              “Kind of busy right now,” Kelly replied in a tight voice. “That’s why we called in Five and Six.”

              Richard dodged a blast, dropped his ship under another to avoid a collision and buried the throttle. He pulled the trigger as he casually flew over one of the enemy and turned it into slag before initiating a barrel roll and joining back up with Kelly. His sensors suggested their first pass took out three fighters, leaving three others.

              Five and Six engaged the attackers, driving them back from the shuttle. A random, lucky shot from the enemy tagged the shuttle, making the shield flash. Five dropped a missile which chased the fighter some distance before the fuel ran out and it exploded. Richard hailed med one.

              “You guys okay?”

              “Keep them off us!” The pilot yelled back. “We can’t take another one.”

             
As if it was our fault.
Richard bit his tongue.

              “Contact!” Kelly cried. “Six more!”

              “Oh, hell with this.” Richard lowered his head and plunged straight at one of the first three. The computer sought a lock while he dialed in to the open channel. “Mayday to any fighters in the area. We need additional backup ASAP. Over.”

              “This is Tiger Three,” a voice answered. “We’re en route to your position. Just hang on.”

              Solid tone sounded in his ears and he pulled the trigger. The shots hit the shields but didn’t finish him off. The ship careened but maintained course and speed. Richard fired again, this time clipping the side of his target.

              That did the trick and the ship spun out of control before exploding in a fiery globe.

              “I got another one,” Kelly said. “The last one’s on his way to his buddies.”

              “This is Panther Six…I’ve been hit.” Richard turned in his seat to try and see him. “I need to get back to the Behemoth. Stick is sluggish and shields are down.”

              “Get your ass out of here,” Richard said. “You’re not doing anyone good. We’ve got this. Look, Tiger Wing’s here. We’ve got this.”

              Four Tiger wing ships joined them just as the enemy engaged. Richard had a last second to glance at his sensors to see that Med One was less than a minute away from docking with the Behemoth. They had to hold on for such a short period of time, just a little longer and the mission would be complete.

              Now, with seven on seven, it seemed much more than possible.

              Except that the enemy had a plan.

              Two of the ships broke their formation and moved at full speed for Panther Six. “Stop them!” Kelly shouted, diverting her own ship to intercept. She was rewarded with a pulse blast that nearly took her out of the sky. Richard watched her spin away, only regaining control well out of the fight.

              Panther Six attempted to evade but three solid hits tore his frame in half. The last thing Richard heard from his friend, Brian DuVall, was a short scream and half the word
eject
. A ball of gold flame burned out in an instant and then, the pilot and all traces he ever existed were simply gone.

              The rest of the fight was a total frenzy of straight, concentrated violence. Panther and Tiger wing paired up, taking the enemy fighters down in rapid succession. Richard and his wingman, someone he didn’t even bother to identify, closed on a target, dodging multiple pulse blasts before blowing their target to pieces.

              Richard nudged his controls to the left, narrowly avoiding a shot straight to his nose. He played chicken with the other fighter, drawing him in. When they were within three hundred yards, he finally pulled the trigger, putting a round straight into what he assumed was the enemy’s cockpit.

              The shields flashed then the ship burst into flames, turning into little more than slag. Richard spun and dropped below the wreckage, entering the fray from the back. He counted only two enemies left but they didn’t go down without a fight. Three ships from Tiger Wing were destroyed though he saw their pilot beacons flashing for pick up.

             
Thank God, they got out
.

              One pilot was enough for the day.

              “This is Med One, we have made it safely back to the Behemoth. Thank you for the assist, guys.”

             
Yeah, whatever.
“Let’s mop these bastards up and go home.”

              Only the enemy ships bugged out and headed for home. “You still with me, Kelly?”

              “Yeah, I’m here.”

              “I don’t really feel like letting those pricks get away.”

              “Stand down, Panther Seven.” Revente’s voice came on the line. “Assist with pickup duty on the downed pilots. You’ll have your shot at them again.”

              “Sir, they destroyed, they killed—”

              “I know full well what happened,” Revente interrupted. “Get back to the ship. That’s a direct order.”

              Richard fumed as he thought about Brian, his whole body arguing against the command. Ultimately, he obeyed, even as he saw his friend’s face in his mind’s eye and desperately felt an urge for vengeance. More fighting wouldn’t bring him back…but it just might make him feel better. The weight of the loss settled in as he turned his ship around and headed for home.

             
I sure hope that God damn shuttle was worth it.
Richard drew a deep breath and let it out, trying to find his center. Sadly, that wouldn’t happen any time soon.

 

Chapter 16

 

              Chief Medical Officer Laura Brand had been busy. Her staff, spread out between two hospitals, handled a number of casualties from minor burns to far more severe lacerations. While the Behemoth seemed to come away from the skirmishes in reasonable shape, several of her crew bore the brunt of the damage.

              The past hour and a half since the initial battle had her moving from table to table, double checking patients and the care plans of her subordinates. A vast majority of the hurt would survive and they’d only lost three patients so far. If she wasn’t running around the room like a crazy person, she’d take a moment to knock on wood.

              “Priority patient!” Someone shouted the words as they entered the room, pushing a gurney made of some kind of shimmering metal. Laura directed one of her nurses to take over stitching a young man’s arm and rushed over to the pilots entering her hospital.

              “What’s going on? Who is this?”

              “He’s one of the crew from the alien vessel,” one of the pilots explained. “Suffering from amnesia and complications resulting from suspended animation.”

              Laura’s eyes widened. “Who sent you here with him? We don’t know anything about his physiology let alone how to treat…complications.”

              “Orders from the Captain, Ma’am. We need to get back to our duties.”

              Laura watched the men leave, fighting back a feeling of exasperation. Turning to the person on the gurney, she admired his jet black hair and odd colored skin. Other than the cosmetic differences, he seemed to have all the parts of a human. Perhaps they could help him after all.

              “Hello, sir, my name is Doctor Laura Brand. Do you understand English?”

              He clung to a small device and it rattled something off in his language. He replied in a series of strange syllables, mostly mumbled. When he finished, the speaker on his device spoke up in a pleasant, articulate voice. “He does not speak your language, Doctor Brand. His name is Captain Andu Paltein.”

              Laura nodded. “Okay, Andu. I’m going to perform a diagnostic scan of your body and get a baseline. It won’t hurt and you shouldn’t notice anything at all but the device does make a sound. Try to remain calm.”

              The device once again translated.
Fascinating device. I wonder how it knows English
.

              Idle curiosity had to wait. She drew out her tablet and initiated a diagnostic program, directing the hand held scanner over the alien’s torso. Regular beeps emitted from the speakers as it collected data, analyzing his organs and brain waves. The process took less than two minutes and she drew away to check the results.

             
Body temperature: 99.2 degrees

              If he had much in common with humans, he’d be running a little on the high side.
Possible side effect of waking up. The body might compensate for running cooler.

             
Respiratory Rate: 26 BPM
.

              Also, slightly abnormal to humans. The average fell between twelve and twenty breaths per minute.
Could be nerves or another complication. We haven’t done enough experimentation with suspended animation. This man is technically the first successful application of such a process.

              Heart Rate: 110 beats a minute
.

              A little fast, again, possibly from nerves. A foreign ship, new people, an uncertain future…Laura needed to learn whether fear motivated his various bodily functions or if this was normal for his people. They had no other examples to go by so Captain Paltein would be their baseline. Maybe if others woke up, they could develop some averages.

              Organs were all in the right place for a human being and performed the same functions. His melanin levels seemed on par with humans but there was some other, unidentified chemical in his system causing the metallic sheen. Laura didn’t feel comfortable giving him any drugs meant for humans but other, non-medical treatments, should be possible.

              Laura tapped into Captain Atwell’s line and paced away. “Hi Laura, what’s going on?”

              “I’ve got an alien in my hospital, that’s what’s going on,” Laura replied. “What exactly did you think I could do with this man?”

              “My report states he has some form of amnesia. Can you assist?”

              Laura closed her eyes and shook her head. “With one of our own crew members? Probably, yes. But an alien? I mean, his body is quite a lot like ours but I have no idea what our drugs will do to him. I can’t even speculate as to how he’d react to anything we throw his way. The best I’ve got is non-traditional practices, massage and…and acupuncture. Even then, I’ll be guessing!”

              “That’s all I can ask for,” Gray replied. “However, allow me to express the gravity of the situation: he has information that will allow us to possibly defeat the invading ships that entered our solar system.”

              “Great, no pressure, Gray!”

              “I wouldn’t have said that if it wasn’t dire and he wouldn’t be there if it wasn’t important.”

              Laura sighed. “Understood. I’ll do what I can. Brand out.” She paced for a moment, head bowed in thought. The poor man must be terrified of what was happening and considering his situation, she didn’t blame him. He woke up in the middle of a major battle amidst strangers, aliens without his memory.

             
We’re lucky he hasn’t lost his mind
.

              “Max,” Laura called to one of the younger doctors. He was a slight man, no more than twenty-eight but a fantastic doctor. He graduated top of his class, the last one she taught. “We’re going to need a full workup of our guest. Blood, tissue samples, the works
but
before we get into that, we have a pressing need to restore his memory.”

              “Doctor…” Max gave her a perplexed look. “I…do you know what you’re asking? Amnesia can be caused by practically anything. Physical trauma, psychological…age. Any treatment we might offer depends on why he can’t remember anything.” Realization struck his face. “You already know all of this.”

              “Yes, and in some cases, there’s no treatment but giving the victim some time.” Laura turned to the patient. “But we have to try something. We can’t rely on any drugs, not without the workup to understand how they’d effect him. However, we can try some less evasive methods. Maybe some non-traditional concepts.”

              “Like what?” Max shrugged. “Massage?”

              Laura smirked. “Funny, but not entirely out of the question. I’m going to do a thorough brain scan. Get the labs ready and let’s hope he’s not all that different from us.”

              “I’m on it, Ma’am.” Max hurried off. Laura didn’t disagree with his assessment. As was typical of high level command figures, they asked for results they didn’t understand.
Just fix it
might work for an engine or computer but a living being didn’t cooperate like technology. The biological machine analogy didn’t hold true.

              Laura joined Captain Paltein again, offering him a smile. “Sorry about the delay, sir. I’m going to do a thorough scan of your head, to see if we can do something about your memory loss. Again, it won’t take long and it won’t hurt.”

              The device translated and he replied. Again, the elegant voice spoke through the speaker. “He states that he is okay with you doing whatever you need to do but would like to better understand what is happening. What ship is he aboard and what has happened to his people?”

              “Tell him he is aboard the USS Behemoth, a ship from Earth. His people are in suspended animation and just fine.” Laura paused. “Also, let him know we’re under attack by invaders and knowledge he possesses may save us all.”

             
God, I hope that was the right thing to say
.

              When the computer finished translating for her, a look of determination crossed the man’s face. He looked at her with his strange, teal eyes and smiled, albeit nervously. She reached out and gently touched his shoulder. The reassuring gesture had the effect she hoped for and he relaxed into the gurney.

              Laura’s scanner lit up as she held it near the crown of her patient’s head. The tablet immediately displayed an image of his brain, a holographic representation that became more detailed the longer she held it there. The organ itself appeared to be the same as a human’s and the activity appeared similar.

              After a moment, the picture began to fill in with color. White parts were considered healthy with yellow points of concern and red outright damage. Luckily for him, nothing came back red but some yellow presented itself on the sides. She moved the scanner to the sides to collect more data including internal measurements of the skull.

             
Aha…
Laura’s back stiffened as she noted he was suffering from some minor swelling.
And therein lies the problem. I’m guessing the process of revival happened too quickly and caused some trauma to his organs. I’ll bet when we do the complete workup, we’ll find other, similar issues.

              “Max!” Laura called and he hurried over. “Brain swelling.”

              “What?” Max looked at the scans. “Oh my…subtle but…definitely enough to cause the symptoms.”

              Laura nodded. “Exactly. Now we just have to determine how we’re going to reduce it safely. I have a thought. They have a tech crew over on the alien vessel.”

              “Yeah, I know Ensign Cathleen Brooks. Her parents were friends with mine. She mentioned she was heading over there.”

              “Can you reach out to them and see if they have access to any of their physiology records? We can at least determine if there are any allergies he might have as a species.”

              “I’m on it.” Max stepped away and Laura returned to the Captain.

              “Sir, we’re going to take some samples of your blood and skin tissue. It’s nothing to worry about. We just need to better understand your anatomy so we can help you. Okay?”

              The computer translated then replied after the man muttered to it. “He says that will be fine, Ma’am.”

              “Okay, thank you. Here we go.”
I hope Max finds something. We don’t have time for a proper workup right now. Not with the way Atwell was talking at least.
She prepared a needle and offered him a thin smile. “Try not to look, sir. It hurts less if you don’t see it coming.”

 

***

 

              Cathleen’s com went off and she acknowledged it with a tap, still studying the console she worked on. “Ensign Brooks here.”

              “Hey, Cathy, it’s Max. Do you have a quick second?”

              “Only just. What’s going on?”

              “I’ve got the alien over here on one of my tables but in order to treat him, we need some more information. Organs and such seem to be in the right place but we have no idea if he’s allergic to anything or if he might have special requirements that aren’t being met. Do you have access to any medical records?”

              “Checking.” Cathleen tapped her screen. “Hey, Sid, do we have access to personnel records? Specifically, the medical kind?”

              “Partially,” Sid replied. “I will download them to your tablet.”

              “Max, I’m sending you what I’ve got. Don’t know how complete it is…I’m cleaning up database corruption all over the place.”

              “If that’s what you’ve got, it’ll have to do for now,” Max replied. “If you come across more, please send it over right away.”

              “Will do, Brooks out.”

              “Who was that?” Olly asked.

              “One of the doctors. They needed medical records. How’re you doing on your end?”

              “I could wake them all up at this point,” Olly said. “Looks like we’ve also got all shields, weapons and propulsion to one hundred percent. If we had a pilot up there, we’d be combat effective for sure.”

              “We sure gave it to the bad guys earlier.”

              “Yeah, I suspect that was because we surprised them.” Olly joined her at her console. “Can you get us to a point where we can put in security clearance codes? If those doctors are successful, we’ll need to enter that info fast.”

              “Sure, I’ve got a screen open in another task.” Cathleen showed him. “Sid initiated it for me.”

              “Great.” Olly patted her on the shoulder. “Hey, Sid, how long to open up all the databanks once we have some permission from your captain?”

              “No more than one minute, sir. The data is available, but guarded. All but the fringe information Ensign Brooks has been working on is fairly well preserved. Storage managed the trip, and the various pitfalls, quite nicely.”

              “Sounds good. Let’s keep on the ready. I have a feeling they’ll get back to us soon.”

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