“Excerpt
from Johnny Winger and the Battle at Caloris Basin”
The final story in my series Tales of the Quantum Corps will be available on April 14,
2017. This story brings to a close the
adventures of Johnny Winger. I have to admit
to having mixed feelings about bringing this series to an end, having spent
many years with this character and his comrades on their many missions for
Quantum Corps. But it is time and I
want to give all my readers an early taste of what is to come. So, here goes…
Chapter
2
UNIFORCE Headquarters
The Quartier-General, Paris
March 26, 2155
1845 hours U.T.
General Lamar Quint was right in the middle of
composing a report to UNSAC about what Sentinel and Farside had detected out
beyond the inner Kuiper belt when the apparition first appeared in his
office. He’d been scanning after-action
reports from recent Quantum Corps ops when a faint rustle along the window got
his attention.
When he looked up, he saw a faint shimmer in front
of the glass. At first, he thought it
was only a reflection of night-time Paris outside. Jetcab and turbo traffic was always fierce at
this hour along the Boulevard St. Michel.
The 5th Arrondisement was thick with tourists and pilgrims
swarming around the City of Light for the upcoming Easter week.
But it was no reflection. As Quint stared, the shimmer evolved into
something thicker, something with faint pops and flashes of light embedded, the
thing eventually mutating into a fog which obscured the window altogether.
The hairs on the back of Quint’s neck stood up. He knew what this was and how the hell did an
unknown swarm make it past UNIFORCE security screens anyway? Even as he glared dumbfounded at the
gathering form, he told himself he wasn’t imagining the apparition. He’d had a light dinner downstairs in the
officers’ mess, maybe a few too many wines, but then this was Paris, after all,
and he felt clear-headed.
Even as he watched, Quint could see the form
materializing into something more substantial.
Whatever it was, the config was good.
Only a few flickers and pops of light and the thing was already
beginning to take on visible substance as its bot master slammed atoms to build
structure, to look like—
No, there was no way this could be—
The very fact that an unknown swarm could have
breached some of the tightest security screens this side of Mars made Quint
uneasy and as he was about to sound the alarm, the form snapped suddenly into
full blown substance, no longer a shimmering veil but now recognizably, incredibly…this can’t be happening, maybe I did have
one too many Merlots…one Johnny Winger.
General John Winger right in front of him. A nanobotic angel, a blast from the past.
Quint rubbed his eyes. He knew all the details by heart, how Winger
had perished on Europa back in ’21, during the Jovian Hammer mission, presumed to have been consumed by the Keeper
that had been trolling across the icescape of that tortured world. The memorial service was the stuff of
legend. He’d seen the vid more times
than he cared to remember. The original
atomgrabber and now…and now….
“You can’t be…what you look like.” Quint
muttered. “This is some kind of trick,
some kind of config…and how the hell did you get in here anyway?” He moved to press the alarm button under his
desk, but the angel spoke, loud and clear and in a voice that sounded
authentic.
“General…before you go sounding alarms…let me
explain.” The angel’s face and mouth
tracked well, no blurs, no pixelating, no delays, no latency. Damn,
this one’s good, Quint realized.
“Why don’t you do that, son?” Quint slowly withdrew
his hand from the button, then steepled both hands on his desk and eyed the
swarm cautiously. No sudden moves, nice
and easy. He didn’t know what this angel
was capable of.
The swarm drifted closer, but kept some distance
from Quint’s desk. It stood at something
like attention. In every detail Quint
could see, the angel was a near perfect replica of the original Johnny
Winger. But that couldn’t be…Winger had
died thirty-four years ago.
“Despite what you may be thinking, General, I am actually Johnny Winger. I know what this looks like but I can prove
it to you.”
Quint was dubious, to say the least.
“I doubt that but go ahead.”
“Well—“a hint of a smile, “obviously I look a little
different than I used to. In fact, your
eyes aren’t deceiving you, General. I am
a swarm. But I’m still Johnny
Winger. In fact, my original memories
and identity are still around, tucked away in a drawer, you might say.” Winger didn’t want to go any further than
that…the Shadow Man might be listening in, might already know the truth of what
he had become.
“You don’t say—“
How
do I convince this dinosaur? Winger wondered. “I used to be married. Dana Tallant.
I had…have…one son Liam and a
daughter Rene. They’ve all—well, let’s
just say they’re like me. I shoved off
for Europa on the Jovian Hammer
mission on February 25, 2121, on board the Kepler. The dock hands called her K-Dog.
Hideki Yamato was captain. I
scored a ninety-eight percent on my first SODs test in nog school, you can
check that out with the Academy…”
Quint put up his hands. “Those are all publicly known facts. Just data.
Any spy could come up with that.”
Now Winger’s expression changed. More like a knowing kind of smirk. “You’re right, General. Probably there’s nothing factual I can say
that’ll convince you that I really am Johnny Winger. So I’ll try another approach—“
Quint’s face hardened. How do
I get Security in here without activating something? His mind raced with possibilities….
“So, I’ll try the truth…why I’m here. General, I let myself be consumed by the
Keeper on Europa. It was a deliberate
act.”
“Why would you do that? I never knew the Great Atomgrabber to be a
suicidal maniac.”
Now it was Winger’s turn to pose a question. “Why did we try so hard to put agents and
informants and operatives inside Red Hammer?”
Quint was rapidly growing impatient with this little
game. Still, maybe it was best to humor
this rather insolent angel…Jeez, what an
attitude. “I don’t know…intel? Recon?
Sabotage?”
“Exactly,” Winger said. “That’s what I’m doing like this. The Keeper’s nothing but a forward observer
for the Old Ones…the big cahuna. Surely
you’ve heard of them…it’s been in all the news.”
“Very funny.
So you’re a…what? A spy? A saboteur?
A swarm inside of a swarm? Isn’t
that stretching things a bit?”
“Look, I know this is hard to take,” Winger
said. The angel leaned forward, wrapped
both hands around the edge of the desk.
No fuzz, no blurs. You could
almost believe this actually was John Winger.
“And I don’t have a lot of time.
I’m taking a risk even doing this.”
“What…now you’re going to dissipate if you don’t get
home by midnight? Come on, ‘General
Winger’, I wasn’t born yesterday.”
“No and you didn’t become CINCQUANT by closing your
mind and holding your breath. Will you
just listen, for God’s sake?”
Now Quint glared back, saying nothing. Maybe I
can reach that button, before he zaps me.
Carefully, he unlaced his fingers and splayed them open on top of the
desk. “I’m listening…for the moment.”
“The Mother Swarm is on our front doorsteps…you know
that as well I do. Farside’s basically
confirmed that. What the hell do you
think this KB-1 anomaly really is…Little Red Riding Hood? Look, the Mother Swarm operates according to
some program called the Prime Key. I
don’t understand it myself…it’s like a main program. A major algorithm, something like that. The Old Ones are coming, they’re here
now. They mean to absorb everything into
the swarm…like Earth, the Sun, all the planets.
The truth is they’re the ones who seeded life on this planet, only it
didn’t turn out like they wanted. We’re
supposed to all be swarms…like me.
Evolved from viruses. But that
didn’t happen. Evolution went off the
track. Man is a mistake. So they’re coming back to fix that mistake.”
Quint scowled.
“I’ve heard all this before…it’s the same old Assimilationist crap.”
“It’s not crap,” Winger told him. “It’s the truth. They even plan on building a forward base
somewhere on Mercury, maybe Caloris Basin, if that means anything to you. And some kind of ring to intercept as much of
the Sun’s energy as they can. Quint, we
don’t have much time. I have some room
to get around, to maneuver inside this…mother swarm. Don’t ask me to explain it. But I have intel I need to get to UNSAC. You should be making plans right now, plans
to equip an expedition to Mercury, something to stop this. I can work from inside. But you have to do your part as well.”
This
is all just a bad dream, Quint told himself. Maybe
those Merlots were stronger than I thought…the French do that. “Okay, General…I’ll humor you. If you really do have some intel we can use
to fight off this KB-1 anomaly, Old Ones, Mother Swarm, whatever you want to
call it, how does that intel get to us? To UNIFORCE? Is there some way you can set up a schedule
of contacts, download a file, show me some pictures or something…UNSAC’s going
to want some bona fides as well, something to prove you’re not just a case of
me having indigestion.”
The Winger angel gave that some thought, if a swarm
could be said to think. “I’m actually
running a pretty serious risk even being here now. But I intend to do whatever I can to stop the
Old Ones…without us working together, we have no chance.”
And, with that, the angel began dispersing. Quint had more questions, but Johnny Winger
had other ideas. He watched with
amazement as Winger began fading out, going almost translucent, almost like an
old photo. In minutes, the faintest
outline of the angel was all the remained, dust motes caught in shafts of light
from outside the window. Maybe that’s
all it ever was…dust motes. Then, even
the dust motes were gone.
And Lamar Quint was left with only the image and
nothing more. They’ll think I’m as loony as a monkey reading poetry.
Quint rubbed his eyes and blinked. No Johnny Winger stood before him. He got up and went to the window. Normal tourist traffic outside. Jetcabs swirling around the Eiffel Tower,
buzzing lovers in Luxembourg Gardens next door, alighting like moths outside
street cafes to disgorge their fares.
He decided to talk a walk, maybe a little fresh air
and without really meaning to, found himself riding a lift up to the eightieth
floor, to UNSAC’s suite of offices in the Command Center. He went through all the security screens,
retinal scans and other biometrics and asked the duty officer outside UNSAC’s
office if the Commissioner was in quarters.
“Yes, sir, Madame Commissioner is in quarters but
asked not to be disturbed the rest of the evening. Would you like to leave a message, sir?”
Quint scowled down at the scrawny buzzcut O-3
anchoring the desk. The captain’s name
plate read Towley. Probably
assembled from parts of recruiting posters, he decided.
“Captain, please inform the Commissioner that I
would like to see her on a matter related to KB-1…it is urgent.”
Towley looked like he had just sat on a rake. His eyes narrowed. “Of course, sir. I’ll put it right through.”
Two minutes later, Quint was shown into the office
suite of UNSAC. Angelika Komar was tall,
red-haired and had a face like a schoolteacher, Quint had always thought. Darting eyes, always ferreting out
misbehavior or original thinking among her downtrodden students. CINCQUANT could well imagine Komar
brandishing a rod, always ready to smack the hands of any wayward charges.
Komar offered Quint a drink. They stood together for a moment, toasting
nighttime Paris, then stepped out on the veranda to get a better view. Only the faint veil of a nanobotic security
barrier marred the scene.
Quint described what he had just encountered in his
own office. “I don’t know whether it was
an angel, or a ghost or just indigestion.
But the thing looked and acted like General John Winger.”
Komar sipped at her Chardonnay. “Nonsense.
Oh, I suppose somebody’s cooked up an angel that resembles the
General. It wouldn’t be hard…he was the
most decorated atomgrabber in Quantum Corps history. There must be trillions of images and
likenesses floating around in the ether.
But after thirty years…even if it was an angel, why now? Why thirty years after the General was
consumed in a blaze of glory on Europa?
That doesn’t make any sense.”
“None of this makes sense,” Quint admitted. He polished off his own drink, momentarily
tested the barrier. It buzzed and kicked
his fingers back, like it was supposed to.
“The…thing, angel, whatever…said it was inside the
mother swarm of the Old Ones. That he
was somehow deconstructed and absorbed but had maintained his original
identity, if you can believe that. He
said he was working to sabotage the Old Ones from inside. I couldn’t think of what to say back.”
Komar put a hand on Quint’s shoulder. “Let’s just say I have doubts that what you
witnessed was in any way, shape or form General John Winger. Face it, Lamar, you imagined the whole
scenario. It’s either a trap laid by
elements working for the Old Ones or a stress reaction to all that’s been going
on.”
Quint sighed.
“A distinct possibility, Madame Commissioner.”
Komar was sympathetic. “I want you to sign yourself into sick bay
tomorrow for a checkup, Lamar. I need my
top staff whole and hearty for the days ahead.”
Quint agreed to do that and left. Maybe
she’s right, he told himself on the lift down to the seventieth floor. I
haven’t been getting enough sleep lately.
And with what Sentinel has been reporting lately, anybody would be
spooked.
He resolved to do as UNSAC had ordered and returned
to his own quarters, intending to find something that would help him sleep
later.
So that’s the excerpt. Look for the entire story on April 14, 2017,
available at Smashwords.com and at fine ebook retailers everywhere.
The
Word Shed next post comes on April 17.
See you then.
Phil B.
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