Koban Universe 1 (4 page)

Read Koban Universe 1 Online

Authors: Stephen W. Bennett

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Genetic Engineering, #Adventure, #Literature & Fiction

BOOK: Koban Universe 1
13.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

There was no way of knowing what the clan that had once lived here had forced their alien slaves to make for them. However
, there would be many levels below her, and huge high ceiling areas that spanned four or five levels. There was ample room to try to avoid the Krall, but eventually she’d run out of ammunition, and they would finally sniff her out and corner her in the dark. Being faster and stronger did not trump sheer numbers.

This
wasn’t a matter of heroically selling her life for a good cause in the war with the Krall. These were inbred dregs, left behind with no regard for what the unchecked progeny could do life on an isolated land mass, like this island. On any of the other three continents, these primitive acting Krall throwbacks would already be dead, unable to compete with the larger and tougher animals found there. In the end, they probably couldn’t beat out Koban life on this island either. The dome had provided them a refuge from predators that might pass this way. When the normal prey animals diminished from over hunting, the Koban predators would discover a taste for Krall flesh.

None of those thoughts helped Maggi with her own predicament. She didn’t see this ending in a triumphant victory over a pack of wild Krall. There was
nothing for her to gain in this fight, or for the rest of the Kobani on the planet, regardless of how many of this plague of killers she took down with her. Besides, she had placed her companions at risk, because of her irrational feeling of annoyance. What had she
thought
those four youngsters would do? She sent them off with no instructions at all, except to “scout for threats.” She could have Mind Tapped them in a few seconds with a touch, telling them to stay close, and return quickly.

Now she was going to die
down here, and they might die trying to reach her. She didn’t want their bones to join the pile with hers, although she couldn’t think of a way to get high enough to improve the weak signal of their transducers. She had lost the signal at about thirty feet below the main floor, when she was still close to the open stairwells. That was a direction closed to her now, at least if she wanted to delay her death. Despite the darkness, her IR vision component could guide her. There were other stairs (also next to dead elevators) closer to the center of every Krall factory complex. She went in search of one of those now.

When she reached the next
set of stairs, she knew that the stale, unstirred air here had put her pursuers on her trail again. Wherever she went, some scent would lead them. She was wearing a light jacket, because this island was so far south that it had cool night breezes, coming off the polar ocean currents that flowed past. She started down the stairs, seeking some place she could leave the jacket as a distraction.

As she descended, the walls gave way to a vast feeling
of space, where there were echoes from the blackness around her, sounds of condensation drips, and the smell of mustiness. The lack of visual temperature contrasts close to her, for easy reference when she entered the large open volume, caused her to experience a momentary sense of vertigo. She couldn’t orient herself properly, and the lack of stair rails could send her off the side of the steps if she wasn’t careful.

When she adjusted her focus, she realized there
were
temperature variations detectable farther across the vast feeling space. Old machinery, walkways between them, power and cooling lines, conveyer systems, and structural members could faintly be discerned. The Krall, with their more sensitive IR vision would be able to move faster here than she could. The ripper genes conveyed superior low natural light vision, because they never hunted in total darkness, as she was in now. She had to pay close attention to where she walked, to stay centered on the steps.

When she reached the wide walkway at the bottom of these steps, she touched some of the machinery. It felt damp and gritty to the touch, with flakes coming lose between her fingers.
There had been no maintenance here for a very long time, and unseen rust probably coated many of the metal parts, catwalks, and support beams.

She walked between tall mysterious
pieces of equipment, and turned down several side walkways, to get her heat signature out of sight of the stairs, once her chasers reached this far. They were coming, because she could hear them.

Ah. They’
re back to using the natural cunning displayed when I first entered the dome,
she noted. They had stopped making low frequency sounds, which most animals on Koban could hear, and were using only ultrasonic gabble. It still sounded like nonsense, but it was clear they wanted to sneak up on their prey, unaware that her wolfbat gene modifications let her hear them coming.

They were so confidant she couldn’t hear them, that they were being very noisy. To better sense from which way they were approaching, she closed her eyes and simply listened. She had a clue to orient herself, because they would be trailing her by scent, and would be descending the same stairs she had
just used. As the first of them reached the top of the steps, the echoes of their multiple voices started echoing all through the cavernous volume, reflecting from the walls, machinery, and catwalks.

A peculiar sensation pervaded her mind, as the sounds reflected and reverberated. She had a definite sense not only of where they were, behind and above her on the stair top, but they were over her right shoulder. As she turned her head, the echoes arriving at slightly different times and from different directions, she believed she could pinpoint their location. Not only that, but she could visualize her own catwalk, and the huge hydraulic press she was concealed behind.

Press? How do I know that?
It dawned on her that the shape she sensed next to her, in her mind, fit the design of other Krall factory equipment she had seen in operational factories. She sensed an opening in the side of the press, where material to be shaped would be placed. Quietly, she stepped closer and, eyes still closed, reached a hand out and precisely touched the edge of that recess. She hadn’t needed to fumble. She had found it easily with her eyes closed. She cautiously moved down the walkway several steps, and with more confidence, reached out and touched the other side of that opening.

She was forming a more detailed image of her surroundings by the second, as the echoes arrived, and were placed in some sort of order in her mind. She had no idea how it was happening, but the ability was certainly familiar to her. She had Mind Tapped wolfbats many times, after they had sc
outed for them, to provide the human partners with their mental images of what they had seen. Part of those images came from their eyes, part from their mental images built from echolocations. A human couldn’t make the sounds required for echolocation, but the Krall were being obliging, and doing it for her.

One of the side benefits of the wolfbat hearing genes, had been the inherent improvement in memory organization, experienced in the brains of every Kobani after that modification became fully incorporated. The orderly structure for improved memory storage and fast
data recovery had been noted, examined, and they thought it was understood as a byproduct of the wolfbat’s need for an audio map of the world when flying through a darkened jungle or cave. However, it hadn’t occurred to them to test it like this for humans, when visual cues were unavailable.

Maggi
didn’t have precise ranging cues, based on a personally generated echo measured position in this audio space. However, her mind was automatically organizing the sounds into a perception of the entire space around her. She “knew” just how wide the press was that she was touching. That there was a walkway eleven feet on the opposite side, where a formed metal alloy chest plate could be removed. This press was part of a Krall body armor production line. One that she had seen previously, in a different well-lit factory.

This
acoustic ability was one they hadn’t realized they had. Useful, even if a lesser version of the sharply defined images sensed previously from wolfbat minds. Humans were predominately-visual creatures, so it hadn’t occurred to them to look for this. She could use this ability to elude her pursuers better in the dark, but it literally wouldn’t get her out of this hole.

Now that she could sense where there was cover from the Krall’s IR vision, she could mo
ve along places of concealment. She even had an intermittent sense of where the sound emitters were (the Krall when they were making noise). Fortunately, some of them were babbling all of the time. It wasn’t language, but there were repetitions of the same sounds from different voices, which suggested they did use rudimentary voice signals.

She could tell
this hydraulic press had a narrow opening all the way through to the other side. Her eyes still shut, she crawled through the tight space, quelling the thought that the press might suddenly activate, and convert her into a messy organic replica of Krall chest armor.

Other than the near hatchling sized Krall, the thick chests of the larger ones would not
fit through the opening that had passed her slender frame. She could try other tricks like this, to slow them down. She felt confident she could shoot and hit them with her eyes closed, if they were within fifty to a hundred feet, and acoustically outlined. Her goal was to avoid letting them get that close, because the flare of a shot would identify her position to the entire volume of Krall seeking her. They would come swarming by multiple routes if she was seen.

She pass
ed a small dangling power cable and used her strength to flex it repeatedly, and broke off a thirty-foot length. She removed her jacket, and tied it in a bundle to one end while she walked, her eyes mostly closed. She was unable to resist the periodic need to open her eyes, to see some IR blemish of whatever she was passing. It was confirmation that her mental audio picture hadn’t misled her. That she wasn’t about to step off a catwalk.

She found a place where a slender strip of metal stretched over a
fifteen-foot gap between parallel walkways, with a long drop below. There was no clue what the strip was used for, but it was just lying there, and didn’t appear strong enough to hold her weight.

She tied the other end of the cable
around the strip, and shoved the looped knot out as far as she could, with the jacket hanging down over the drop, as a scent attractant and faint heat source. She lay prone, and scooted out as far as she could, to shove the knot farther away, and felt the metal strip start to sag. It didn’t seem attached to either side. It was a stupid trap, which wouldn’t sucker a four year old. Perhaps a feral Krall would “fall” for this.

She worked her way through the
factory maze, and knew from the accumulated sound sources and noise level, that the trackers had reached the crawl space through the press. It hardly delayed them at all, and they simply walked around. It was good she hadn’t wasted much time trying that.

A short time
later, two screeches, and a clattering of heavy bodies hitting far below proved that the trick with her jacket had worked, prompting a sardonic thought.

Gee!
Two more down and a bazillion to go!

That was an exaggeration.
Her ears actually reported there were only a few
hundred
down here searching for her. Apparently, none of the nearly mindless dolts was willing to branch off and search very far away from the main scent trail. Otherwise, she thought her movements would be sharply curtailed by their ability to see her heat signature from a distance, if they had simply spread out more.

Having that thought proved prescient,
and proof arrived only a few minutes later. Suddenly, there was an ultrasonic cry from a distant catwalk, well separated from the main group that was following her. This Krall had not been making any audible noise at all, and Maggi had been unaware of its position before this. Even now, it was only a dim IR glow to her at that distance. There wasn’t anything between her and it to block the view, and her hotter body glow had been easily spotted. She could handle just that one, but others would be drawn like moths to her IR flame.

The cacophony of ultrasonic calls from the larger group told her the
“first sighting” call wasn’t entirely inarticulate. It must have been an equivalent to “tally ho” or “prey here.”

There was a benefit to her
from the noise increase, as the huge underground cavity filled with high frequency hoots and howls. The definition of the structures around her improved for several seconds. She mentally scanned the acoustic mind picture for somewhere to make a stand, where they couldn’t get to her en masse. She found one, but it had no possibility of retreat once reached.

Other books

Healing Montana Sky by Debra Holland
Dark Secrets by Jessica Burnett
Backcast by Ann McMan
The Eterna Files by Leanna Renee Hieber
Protector of the Flame by Isis Rushdan
The Familiars by Adam Jay Epstein