Read Marine Cadet (The Human Legion Book 1) Online
Authors: Tim C. Taylor
This is disappointing.
GET OVER IT!
Life is filled with disappointments, but there are many chances for victory too. Good fortune smiles mostly on those who work the hardest at turning around their luck. Good Marines know this. When bad shit happens, they stick together, outlast the bad times, and go looking for their chance to turn things around.
Inadequate Marines turn in on themselves, pointing the finger of blame anywhere but at themselves.
We are in the Cull Zone.
Deal with it. As a unit.
The subject of how we were awarded the punishment is not to be discussed. Speculation regarding who might be to blame is forbidden.
And if I find any member of this battalion threatening a fellow cadet whom they blame for putting us in the Cull Zone, then I will burn out that canker of disunity with the utmost severity.
For those of you who think they can blackmail their superiors by acting as unified squads, I say this. Our Jotun officers and I are equally convinced that it is far better to have one company of good Marine cadets than eight companies of bad ones.
All of you can easily be replaced.
Don’t forget that.
MESSAGE ENDS
384th Detroit Scendence Championships.
Day 1 – Practice Match
A cheer exploded through the crush of cadets near the exit to corridor 610. Arun swiveled his smart-plastic chair around to check out the fuss. It wasn’t difficult to work out what was up. A group of cadets from Fox Company were jumping up and down in jubilation, pointing up at one of the sixteen large soft screens mounted on the wall.
Their player had just won a Scendence contest.
The fuss died down soon enough and the parade hall returned to the general low level excitement of a Scendence Day.
“Five minutes!” shouted Del-Marie.
Arun couldn’t bring himself to cheer. Moscow Express had lost their first three contests of the day, which meant that however well Springer did in her individual match, the team result would be a loss. The Scendence season consisted of two practice matches before the knockout stage began. As the first practice, the result didn’t matter anyway, but the mood from the chairs around Arun was still muted.
Another wave of excitement crashed over the parade hall. Arun looked up but couldn’t see any cause. It was just your regular burst of Scendence Day excitement.
Just for a moment, his face fell. They were in one of the battalion’s parade decks on Level 4. It was a dramatic space with a dais for NCOs to give speeches or lead large-scale training classes. Part of the wall behind the dais was built from the carcass of a Muryani attack cruiser, still scorched from the plasma fire that had disabled it before human Marines had boarded. The ship was a proud battle honor, but parade halls were used for many purposes, some not so positive. Arun had witnessed an execution in this room.
Executions made him think of the Cull. Across all cadet battalions in Detroit – currently there were sixty – the four with the lowest Totalizer score at the end of each year lost a tenth of their cadets to the Cull. If your battalion was one of the four in the Cull Zone then there were only two ways to escape the Cull. One was to die beforehand, the other was to reach the last sixteen in a Scendence championship and win immunity.
It didn’t look like Moscow Express was going to be a means for anyone to escape the Cull.
Arun caught himself from slipping into one of his black moods of doom. Today was a Scendence Day. A day’s vacation from such worries. An official day of fun.
He looked up at the screen the Fox cadets were watching, trying to borrow some of their jubilation. The screen replayed the moment of victory. This had been an Obedience-Stoicism contest. The players were each subjected to a random horror. If neither of them flinched, they would face a new horror, and another one until one of them gave way.
The match was running late because of an epic contest that morning between a human player and a Jotun opponent. That contest had gone an incredible twelve rounds before the Jotun had given way when they faced the horror of being buried deep underground in a tunnel collapse.
Not many Jotuns played Scendence and it was rarer too for them to lose to a human. Arun had taken a recording of the frenzied reaction in the room when the human had triumphed. A treasured moment to savor at moments of despair.
At any other time, a display of such disrespect toward the Jotuns would be unthinkable, but the officers expected rowdy behavior on a Scendence Day. It was just one more reason for Arun to think aliens would never make any sense.
The wall-screen now replayed a split view showing both competitors in the Obedience-Stoicism match. Each had their heads clamped and positioned in front of a perforated, black screen. A spike emerged from one of the holes turning slowly but relentlessly, aimed at the left eye of each player.
In real time the advance of the spike had been agonizingly slow. The replay sped up the action until the tip stopped a hand’s-breadth from the eye. Then a needle emerged from the tip of the spike, pushing on toward the eye. Closer. Closer. Then it pierced the cornea. Neither player showed any reaction.
The spike had advanced in silence but now a motor purred as it pushed the needle deeper into the eye. Arun couldn’t help but blink in sympathy.
A depressurization alert blasted out its twin tones. Depressurization drill was so ingrained in all of them that Arun nearly leaped from his seat. Just in time, he realized the sound was coming from the Scendence replay, a cruel trick to distract the players. They didn’t react at all.
Then the clamps holding their heads in place fell away in a burst of compressed air.
Each player now had a needle inside their eyeball with only willpower keeping their head steady enough for it to do no damage.
Arun shook his head in wonder. He’d be blubbing like a baby long before this stage.
The loser lasted another four seconds before screaming and shutting his eyes. The scream turned to a wail of agony as the needle gouged a path of pain through his retina.
The Fox supporters jeered.
“Look at those foxies,” said Arun. “I’d like to see them take a needle in the eye without blinking.”
“I for one couldn’t,” said Osman who was standing just behind Arun, there not being enough seats for everyone.
“Cristina did,” said Del-Marie.
Slumped in her chair across from Arun, Cristina gave a halfhearted smile.
“Yeah, we’re proud of you,” added Arun.
There was a grunt of agreement, which made Arun feel relief that his squadmates were beginning to act as if her were one of them again.
Cristina ignored them all.
In the morning session, she had taken the needle without flinching, but so too had her opponent. On the second round, she had screamed in pain when the poisonous scorpion in her mouth stung her. Her opponent had shown no reaction.
Osman’s Deception-Planning had involved a card game, never a good scenario for Osman. His opponent hadn’t even hesitated before he called Osman’s bluff. Arun felt bad about that. Osman still wanted Arun to take his place in the team, but Springer had advised him to wait for now. Madge was still too mad at him after the battalion’s Cull Zone punishment.
As for Madge, she was still on her way down from orbit after her Gunnery contest. She had done well but her opponent had done better still, which seemed to sum up Moscow Express’s day.
Arun looked back at the wall-screen, which was now showing fluid being pumped back into the competitors’ eyes.
The Scendence tortures had been virtual, but they had felt real to the competitors because they had been wearing total immersion suits. The irony was that in order to shoot images directly at the retina while bypassing the lensing effect of the eyes, the liquid inside each eyeball was drained when the suit was put on, and reinserted before removal.
Arun felt a kick against his chair leg.
“Springer’s in position,” said Del-Marie gruffly.
Flicking through the several hundred Scendence feeds offered on his softscreen, Arun quickly found several for Springer’s contest. He picked one that showed his friend’s viewpoint and offered audio commentary too.
Scendence players wore caps that strapped over the forehead rather like the training caps cadets wore during second sleep. You could tap into the player’s mind, to see what they saw; hear what they heard. Some of the highest rated ACE-3 battlesuits, allowed you to do this too, tapping into the view from your squadmates. There weren’t many of these advanced suits to go around and they were reserved for NCOs. They struck Arun as a very good idea.
“Here she goes,” said Del-Marie, rather pointlessly as they were all watching Springer from various feeds as she walked out into a transparent box a dozen meters over the chilly water of Lake Tavistock.
The thin ice crust underneath had been melted for the contest. The commentary said the water temperature was only 4 degrees above freezing.
Each player was dressed in fatigues: boots, camo pants, and a thin shirt. Springer’s viewpoint was shaking: she was shivering already.
Arun switched to a wider angle view. The two players were in a see-through box with a dividing wall between them. At the bottom of each compartment was sump filled with water. The objective was to fill the bucket they had been given, climb up a spiral staircase which ended in a hole at the top of the dividing wall. You had to throw the water through the hole to fill your opponent’s compartment. The volume of water in each compartment started off the same. Once one player’s compartment contained two thirds of the combined water volume, its floor would open up, dumping the loser into the lake below.
From his feed, Arun could see in the distance that a duplicate setup was positioned a short distance farther into the lake. A contest was already underway in the other setup.
Something about one of the figures in the other contest drew him in, making him zoom the view onto the other match as best he could.
It was Xin!
Springer’s match wouldn’t start for a minute or two, so he quickly found a feed that showed a closer view of Xin.
At the top of each compartment was an opaque box. Xin’s match had progressed enough for it to open. It looked like it had deposited biting insects and a slimy goop over the competitors. Xin and her competitor looked like they had been half digested and then vomited up by some hideous monster, but Arun would kiss Xin in an instant.
Despite all the drent that had happened recently, he still felt exactly the same about that girl.
He wasn’t watching Xin just to stare at her figure, he told himself. He selected another feed, one that showed a close-up of her face. Arun looked beyond her physical beauty at the determination that blazed from her eyes, the steadiness of her stride as she ascended the slippery steps. Her every movement was calculated, efficient, strong.
Xin put him in mind of a common saying about Scendence:
To take part is but a passing diversion. It is winning that matters.
Her determination to win was almost machinelike. For all that he admired her, Xin scared Arun a little too.
The commentary feed was showing the score: 58% of the water was in Xin’s compartment. She was losing!
“Come on,” Arun whispered under his breath.
He delved through the commentary stats for the trends. Xin was losing but she was clawing back. She had been on 62% at one point, just 4% away from a long drop into the lake. Xin poured a bucketful into her opponent’s compartment. Now she was on 57%.
Keep going!
Xin leaped down into the sump and began refilling.
Meanwhile her opponent slipped from the stairs, spilling out half the contents of her bucket. She took a moment to catch her breath before dipping her bucket in the sump again.
“Yes!”
With a grin, Arun realized that Xin wasn’t losing, she was winning! She had paced herself. Her opponent had started off in a frantic burst of energy but had tired so much that she was visibly exhausted. Xin would carry on like a robot until she won.
Minute by minute, bucket by bucket, Xin came back from the brink to draw level with her opponent. And then claw her way into the lead.
“Thank Horden.”
Arun looked up. That had been Zug’s voice.
Following Zug’s gaze to the wall-screens, Arun saw Springer splash up and down with glee in her compartment. She was grinning so wildly that her dimples were dark pits.
“Yes!” Arun punched the air in triumph.
Instantly, he realized something was wrong. A stony silence had replaced the jubilation around him. The guys were all staring at him
Del-Marie was out of his seat advancing toward Arun.
It was like a bad dream. Arun couldn’t quite believe this was happening
“Give me that!” snapped Del-Marie.
He snatched the softscreen out from Arun’s hands, the screen that showed Xin battling her opponent. Del paraded the screen around the squad, holding it aloft like a trophy.
Arun blushed with shame.
Del-Marie pointed up at the screen where Springer was bouncing up and down in delight. “There,” he said. “There! That’s Springer. You should be paying her attention. She is ours. You are hers. Frakking imbecile! You look at this cheap vulley-flit instead?”
“She’s not a…” Arun stopped. Defending Xin wasn’t going to help.
“Arun, it’s not all right.” Zug spoke calmly. Everyone listened. “This is not a small mistake of rudeness. You have let us down. No bulletin from Staff Sergeant Bryant is going to let you off this hook.”
“I’m sorry.”
“
Oh, I’m sorry
,” echoed Del-Marie sarcastically. “Sorry isn’t good enough.”
“I swear, lance corporal,” insisted Arun. “I promise I’ll always put my squad mates first, in front of any… distractions outside of the section.”
Del-Marie held Arun’s gaze, but then he looked away, probably thinking of Bernard, his boyfriend from Beta Section. Where would Del’s loyalties lie if pushed?
Osman joined in. “If you and Xin were an item,” he said, “then it would be different. Slightly. But you aren’t. She’s just a vulley-dream. Come on, man, she’s way out of your league. Time to grow up a little. Swear you’ll put us before her.”