The Alpha Protocol: Alpha Protocol Book 1 Duncan Hamilton (affordable ebook reader .TXT) đ
- Author: Duncan Hamilton
Book online «The Alpha Protocol: Alpha Protocol Book 1 Duncan Hamilton (affordable ebook reader .TXT) đ». Author Duncan Hamilton
Price was his ever-ominous presence in his black Marine combat armour. He had his carbine slung in his arms, rather than locked in its thigh holster. The sight of it out and ready to go was a little unnerving, another reminder of the potential danger of what they were about to do. The locals might be the most dangerous of the lot. If theyâd been making a decent sideline in smuggling artefacts off the planet, they might not prove happy at the prospect of losing the source of income. Samson nodded to Price, put his helmet on, pressured up his suit, and set off down the landing ramp.
The farmstead was burned to the ground.
In his excitement at discovering the void with his sensor sweep, Samson hadnât paid much attention to the farmâhe had just assumed it would be as he expected. That was very definitely not the case.
âWhat do you make of that?â Samson said.
âItâs burned down,â Price said.
Behind the concealment of his helmet, Samson grimaced at the looseness of his question and his expectation that the galaxy-wise Price might have an answer for everything. Price took pity on him, however.
âCanât see anything that looks like weapons fire from here,â Price said. âIf it was an orbital bombardment, thereâd be charred craters. If it was a ground assault, Iâd expect the damage pattern to be differentâthings blown up and outward. This all looks like it just burned down. With that much space between the buildings, Iâd say it was done deliberately.â
Samson smiled to himselfâperhaps Price did indeed have all the answers.
âMaybe the farmsteaders abandoned the place, and burned it down before they left.â
âMaybe,â Price said. âBut construction materials are at a premium out here. More likely theyâd have left it up to be dismantled and sold, if they were planning to move on.â
Another mystery, but this one wasnât Samsonâs to solve.
âLetâs move toward the void, see if we can find our way to the spot where it looks like they were digging.â
The ground was dry, crunching underfoot, and Samson didnât envy anyone trying to make a life for themselves in agriculture. It would take a lot of effort to get a good yield out of that ground. What made it worse was that the surface was uneven, undulating hollows and rises quickly giving way to larger, craggy features that jutted up from the ground. They reminded Samson of termite mounds, or a soft landscape that had been carved into unusual shapes by the wind.
Samson surveyed the crags as he walked. They looked ancientâfeatures of the planetâs surface shaped over millennia. It was entirely possible that they were ancient, but to Samsonâs surprise, his scan indicated they were definitely not natural.
He went closer to one of the âtermite moundsâ and gave his scanner the opportunity for an in-depth investigation. There was a metallic, artificial structure beneath the crumbling mud shell. Samson looked up across the landscape. There were thousands of mounds. If every one of them was an artificial structure, this site would be as big as the largest of human cities.
It took a very long time to completely cover up a cityâlonger still for that covering to look as worn and weathered as the landscape here. Samson felt his skin tingle with the magnitude of it.
It hammered home to Samson how fleeting everything was. They might well be standing over the remnants of a civilisation that had existed here well before man had even discovered how to make fire. He remembered the old conspiracy theories of how the Nexus was actually an artificial construct. If so, might this have been the home of the race that built it? The possibilities seemed endless.
Caught up in his imagination, Samson forgot that Price was standing behind him with an expectant look on his face.
âWhateverâs under here,â Samson said, âsomeone built it. Something. Letâs get to the earthworks site.â
âDonât know what I was expecting, sir,â Price said, âbut this ainât it.â
âNo,â Samson said. âItâs not really what springs to mind when you say âancient alien ruinsâ. Still, who knows whatâs beneath us.â He raised his wrist console and opened a communications channel.
âSamson to Bounty.â
âGo for Bounty.â It sounded like Corporal FĂ©ng.
âWeâre going to explore for one hour,â Samson said. âIf weâre not back in two, your orders are to get back to the depot and wait for the Peterson.â
âAcknowledged, Commander,â FĂ©ng said.
âWe better move on carefully,â Samson said. âThe ground could be thin enough to fall through. The earthworks are this way.â
âOver there, sir,â Price said.
Samson followed the direction of Priceâs pointed finger, and saw what appeared to be a hole in the muddy crust of one of the crags. Samson scanned the ground between him and the hole, as he had been doing since entering the termite mound area, but it appeared to be thick and solid enough to walk on. Content that he wasnât going to fall into a bottomless abyss, he and Price made for the hole, which looked too small for a man to crawl through. He crouched next to it and peered inside. The torch on his wrist console didnât penetrate very far into the darknessâwhich went on for a long way.
âI canât see anything,â Samson said, âbut thatâs the void we detected on the other side. Wonder whatâs in here.â
He looked up at Price, who shrugged.
âOnly one way to find out, sir.â
Samson nodded and started to carefully break away the edges of the hole. The mud was windblown and sun-baked, and he was able to pull off large chunks with little effort. It wasnât long before the hole was large enough for him to get through. He put his head in and looked around, but it was still too dark to see anything. He couldnât tell where the floor beneath him was, nor how far down the void went. Not knowing anything
Comments (0)