Destiny, Episode XVIII: The Archive
Previous Episode: Episode XVII, The Ishtar Collective
Next Episode: Episode XIX, The Nexus Mind
Next Episode: Episode XIX, The Nexus Mind
The Ishtar Sink, Venus
Day 041
Koga
grimaced as he stepped foot on Venusian soil once more. It had been a few days
since the firefight at the Collective’s outpost, but the Cryptarchy was still
pouring through the data the Paladins had stolen from the Vex core. While Kita
may have had a game plan to find and kill the Gate Lord, the Vanguard had
ordered the Guardians to delay the mission until they were sure it wasn’t a
trap.
The brief respite had been
appreciated, but even a Warlock got antsy if you made him sit on his hands for
long enough. He had decided a few hours prior to arriving on Venus to go up to
the Tower plaza and see what was going on. Almost as soon as he had arrived,
Master Rahool had beckoned him over.
“What
do you know about the Ishtar Collective?” Rahool had asked, not even attempting
to look up from his tablet. Koga had replied honestly that they were a group of
scientists and researchers that had come to Venus, though he didn’t know why.
The Cryptarch had stopped at that, and lowered his pad so that he could stare
the Warlock in the eyes before smiling thinly. “A simple mission,” Rahool had
said, “just access a server and you’ll be back before you know it!”
Of
course it wasn’t that simple, but it wasn’t like Koga could say “no” to the man
who seemed to have the whole Tower in a vice.
And
so, here he was in the Ishtar Sink, alone, his hand cannon at his side. He had
been sent off so quickly that he hadn’t had the time to ask for the rest of his
fireteam to come along. He could already feel eyes boring into his skull,
hidden Fallen and Vex watching him from the shadows.
“Well,
the sooner we get this done, the sooner we go home.” Kita muttered, displeased.
“I
would rather someone else managed this.” Koga sighed. “I do not like our odds
alone.”
“What
the hell are you doing here?” A voice said from behind the Warlock. Startled,
Koga spun to face the source, his Hoss being leveled as quickly as he could in
order to be ready to fire. He found himself staring at an Exo wearing a
tattered yellow cloak, a strange-looking pistol in his hands. The Hunter hadn’t
raised his weapon to respond to the surprised Warlock at all, just holding it
lightly in case a real threat came along. Heart pounding, cheeks burning in
embarrassment, Koga slowly straightened his stance.
“I
apologize, you caught me by surprise.” He apologized. The Hunter shrugged.
“It’s
alright.” He replied. “You didn’t answer my question, though. I don’t recognize
you, which means that you’re new. What are you doing alone on Venus?”
“The
Cryptarch-“ Koga started, but the Hunter held up a hand, interrupting him.
“Yeah,
I figured he’d do this.” The Hunter said, pacing towards the Warlock. He
extended a hand, and Koga shook it. “Shiro-4, nice to meet you.”
“Koga.”
The Warlock smiled under his robes. “It is good to meet you, Shiro.” Faintly, a
memory floated to the top of his mind – he had heard this name before. He
cocked his head to the side slightly, inquisitively. “I think we may have
worked together before. Were you the Vanguard scout at the Cosmodrome when the
Hive first appeared?” Shiro nodded slowly, somewhat surprised.
“Yeah,
I was.” The Hunter replied. “Why, were you there?”
“I
was in the fireteam that breached into the Skywatch that night.”
“No
kidding?” Shiro leaned on his back foot, crossing his arms. “You guys did a
hell of a job, I’m not going to lie. That really could have gone south
quickly.”
“I
appreciate the compliment.” Koga said, holstering his hand cannon. “We work
best together, I think.” Shiro shrugged.
“So,
why’d the Cryptarch send you here?”
Koga
frowned. “He sent me to secure an archive of some kind.” Shiro shook his head,
muttering a curse. Koga stared at the veteran Hunter, caught aback. “Is there a
problem with that?”
“Oh,
it’s no problem.” Shiro said, his voice suddenly harsh. “No problem, except every
server is in the middle of a warzone!” He shook his head. “So help me, when I
get my hands on that blue-skinned son of a…” Shiro trailed off, his hands going
to his hips. There was an awkward silence for a moment, only the whistle of the
wind against wet rock breaking the still. He looked up at Koga, grimacing.
“Alright, I’ll come with you.”
“You
will?” Koga repeated, surprised. The Hunter nodded, and suddenly a Sparrow
transmatted to his side. He clambered on to it, its engine howling to life. It
took a second for things to click for Koga, and when it did he quickly
transmatted his own vehicle down from the orbiting Arcadia. “Thank you, Shiro.”
Koga said, his Sparrow lifting off the ground as he got on.
“Don’t
thank me yet.” Shiro muttered, frowning under his Hunter’s helmet. “We still
have to get through the House of Winter.”
<><><><><><><>
Koga trailed behind the elite scout,
mirroring every move that Shiro made as carefully as he could. Shiro flew
similarly to Lisset when she was in a good mood, making sharp turns at
breakneck speeds. Unlike the far less experienced Hunter, Shiro kept his
Sparrow as close to the walls of a space as possible, which lead to more
white-knuckle riding that the Warlock was comfortable with. He didn’t know why
– his running theory was that it was just how Hunters worked – until there was
a terrific explosion off to his right in the center of the broken roadway.
Shiro brought his Sparrow to a halt and pointed at the smoldering crater with
two fingers.
“Word to the wise,” Shiro started,
“stay way from the middle of a road. It’s where the Fallen like hiding their
mines.” Koga slowly nodded, and followed the Hunter as Shiro sped off again.
Eventually the two dismounted at the
entrance to the Ishtar Library, the same broken corridors and tunnels that Koga
had traveled through five days before. There were more Fallen defending the
entrance, but they did not last long. Shiro’s movements were practically a
blur, his pistol snapping up from where he had holstered it on his hip and
flashing to life. It fired in a rapid triple burst, streaks of blue light going
from barrel to target. Anything unfortunate enough to be hit disintegrated in a
spark of light as arc energy did its volatile work. Koga didn’t have the chance
to fire a shot when the last Fallen burned away.
“Woah.” Kita whispered, awestruck.
Shiro turned back and waved his arm in the direction of the entrance, beckoning
the Warlock to come closer.
“So this is what a Guardian elite
looks like.” Koga noted quietly. It was hard not to be impressed.
Koga followed Shiro into the dimly
lit blue tunnels, the Hunter’s sidearm at the ready. “So, how long has it been
for you?” Shiro suddenly asked.
“How long has what been for me?”
Koga repeated, confused. Shiro kept moving, pacing carefully forward.
“How long have you been a Guardian?”
Koga frowned as he tried to
remember. Fortunately for him, he didn’t have to think long before Kita
answered for him.
“Forty-one terrestrial days.” The
Ghost replied. “In that time, we have fought the Fallen, the Hive, and the
Vex.” Shiro shook his head.
“Unbelievable.” He muttered
disapprovingly. “You’re damn lucky to be alive going up against what you have.”
“Is it unusual for this to happen?” Koga
asked. The blue tunnel was beginning to climb upwards into the library, and
already the Warlock could hear the sound of battle. The Vex were fighting the
Fallen, but he couldn’t tell from here who was winning.
“Unusual to send a bunch of
newly-Risen Guardians into the fire?” Shiro repeated. “Yeah. You ought to be still
doing training patrols with an older Guardian right about now. Why’d you skip
it?” Koga shrugged.
“I came to the Tower in a ship, and
it had no NLS drive.” He replied. “The Vanguard put the three of us together
into a fireteam, and we went back to the Cosmodrome.”
“And killed an Archon in the
process.” Kita added helpfully. That got Shiro’s attention. The Hunter stopped
and spun on his heels to face Koga, surprised.
“You
killed an Archon?” He repeated, stunned. Koga wasn’t overly fond of Shiro’s
implication. The Hunter scoffed, and shook his head. “Huh. I guess that
explains what you’re doing out here.” Shiro turned back to face the exit out
onto the library floor. “The Vex are trying to take the Collective, and Fallen
aren’t letting them have it that easily. I’d rather not get caught in the
middle.” He glanced over his shoulder to look at Koga. “Just stay right behind
me, and we’ll be on the other side in a second.” The Warlock slowly nodded, and
braced for the fight.
Shiro took off running, his cape fluttering
behind him as he ran up onto into the center of the warzone. Koga followed
close behind, his hand cannon roaring as he fired poorly aimed pot shots at
anything he saw. Most rounds missed, but one or two hit their mark to deadly
effect.
The
Vex dominated the ground floor, but the Fallen were firing down at them from
the balconies above, Vandals firing their line rifles at the well-armored
Minotaurs and Hobgoblins. To move right up the middle seemed like suicide, but
Shiro rushed right into the thick of it without even saying a word.
The Vex almost immediately
recognized the presence of the Guardians, and turned to respond, but Shiro
slipped between them like a breeze, flowing through bronze armor and angry red solar
bolts as the Vex scrambled to acquire a target. Koga ran as fast as he could, barely
keeping pace with the Hunter’s breakneck speed. A few glancing shots from a
Minotaur’s heavy void cannon, and suddenly they were through, sprinting through
a dilapidated corridor that Koga had never seen before.
Shiro
came to a stop, slapping a new magazine into his sidearm. Koga caught up to
him, panting as he caught his breath. “Holding up okay?” Shiro asked, looking
back at the Warlock.
“Yes.”
Koga replied quickly. He reloaded his hand cannon, readying himself for
whatever waited ahead of them. “How much further to the Archive?” Shiro
grimaced.
“Not
too far, just a quick sprint past a downed Skiff.” The Hunter answered. “Just
stick with me, and you’ll be fine. We’ll find that server of yours and then
you’ll be able to go home.”
“Yeah,
about that, Shiro…” Kita suddenly started slowly. “You keep saying ‘server.’
That’s not what we’re here for.” Shiro paused for a moment as realization
dawned on him.
“Wait,
you’re not talking about the Archive,
are you?” He said with growing horror.
“Is
there more than one?” Koga replied, somewhat confused. Shiro sighed slowly.
“No,
no there isn’t.” The Hunter said. “There’s an Archive here that’s been locked
off for centuries. The doors are reinforced so heavily that we haven’t been
able to scratch them, and even the Fallen have been locked out. It’s a fool’s
errand – no one has been in or out of the Archive since the Collapse.” Shiro
pulled the slide back on his sidearm, gripping the weapon tight as he vented
his frustration on his piece. “What does Rahool think he’s doing? It’s a waste
of time.”
“That’s
the thing.” Kita replied. “He gave us codes.” Shiro cocked his head at the
Warlock, and the Ghost hidden in his robes.
“Codes?”
He repeated. “You’re serious?” Koga nodded slowly, a few steps behind in the
conversation. The Cryptarch had been more than a little vague in his briefing,
and the twin facts of the Archive’s nature and the existence of codes to gain
access had been ones never relayed to the Warlock. Quietly, Koga made a note to
himself to speak to Kita about knowing when to and when not to hold back
information.
Shiro
shook his head in disbelief, his cloak rustling and unfurling as he moved. “Unbelievable.”
“You
keep saying that word.” Kita noted.
“It’s
a good word.” Shiro replied, shrugging. He looked at Koga, examining him again,
trying to get the measure of the man he was going to be fighting alongside.
“Just so you know, the instant we get inside, the Fallen are going to come
right in after us. We’ll be fighting alone against Traveller-knows how many
hostiles, and it won’t be easy transmatting away. Are you sure you’re up for
this?”
Koga
nodded, his hands wrapping tighter around his hand cannon. “I am not afraid of
the Fallen, Shiro. That Archive could hold the answers to a thousand mysteries
– I will not pass up this opportunity.”
Shiro
smiled as well as an Exo could, a thin Hunter’s grin. “Well, you certainly sound like a Warlock.” He turned to face
the way forward, his hands holding his custom sidearm in a ready position. One
hand came off the gun, and waved in the direction forward like a knife before
returning to its place. “Let’s get going then. We’ve got us an Archive to
find.”
<><><><><><><>
The
crashed Skiff that Shiro had mentioned in passing was far more impressive than
he had let on. It stuck out of the ground from where it had crashed so long
ago, a gaping hole in the roof of the structure where it had punched through on
its final flight. It was completely overgrown by vines and rusted over from
constant exposure to Venus’ wet environment. What had happened to the pilots of
the ship, or its passengers, was a mystery for the ages. Who would control the
wreck now was a far easier question to answer in theory, and one being decided
in practice, for the entire chamber surrounding it was a battleground.
The
Fallen fought from improvised defensive positions, chattering to each other in
their clicking alien tongue. Even after over a month of listening to it, Koga
had little idea what any one sound or syllable meant. The blue-draped Vandals and caped Captains
watched their underlings fight and die as streaks of blue light mixed with red
bolts of solar fire being launched from the guns of two dozen Goblins. The Vex
approached with cold determination, phased not by the wall of incoming fire
they were pacing steadily towards. Whenever a frame died, another took its
place, reinforcements dropping into the fight from ever forming and breaking
clouds in the back of the line.
“Looks
like we’ve come at a good time.” Shiro said over comms. “The Vex are making a
play to secure the area. It should keep the Fallen distracted for a while, at
least until they drive the Vex back.”
“Why
would the Vex retreat?” Koga asked.
The
Hunter shrugged, unsure. “I don’t know. War of attrition? Maybe the Vex decide
to shunt their resources somewhere else. No matter who wins the battle, the Vex
are going to bleed the Fallen dry eventually.”
“Surely
there’s not that many of them.” Kita said, somewhat nervously. “Right?” The lack
of an answer from Shiro did little favors to both Koga and his Ghost’s nerves.
“Just
stay with me, and we’ll be at the entrance to the Archive in no time.” With
that, Shiro took off bolting, moving as fast as his legs could take him – which
was quite damn fast, given that he wasn’t held back by biology. Koga did his
best to keep pace, dodging errant fire directed his way as the battle raged off
to their flanks.
Of
course, two Guardians suddenly sprinting into the middle of a firefight was
going to catch attention, and a series of barked commands came from the Fallen
defensive lines. A Vandal and a dozen Dregs suddenly rushed from where they had
been fighting the Vex to try to intercept Koga and Shiro. Unlike last time, the
Warlock actually managed to get more shots off than the Hunter did, his Hoss
kicking hard against his hand with every pull of the trigger.
The
Vandal went down first, Koga’s shots well-aimed despite the circumstances. That
moment of confusion and panic was all the Warlock needed to finish the job, his
shots precise and landing perfectly through the skulls of the remaining Dregs.
He reloaded on the move, hurrying to catch up with Shiro, who had already
existed the large courtyard-like space and gone into another hallway leading
deeper into the complex.
Killing
seemed disturbingly easy to Koga now, something he hadn’t thought much about
before. In the heat of a firefight, it was hard to wonder about why he was
pulling the trigger, nor about how casually he seemed to take a life. Something
about the way he had gunned down the entire Fallen team the way he did suddenly
struck a chord with his conscience. As far as he could remember, he had never
taken a life before he became a Guardian. Since he had, he had killed more than
he cared to count. Why did it come so easily to him now?
It
was something to think about later. Koga forced the discussion into the back of
his mind, one of many things to look into in the future. Lisset or Basilisk
would not be the ones to talk to about this – they were soldiers in their last
life, warriors who were accustomed to battlefields and to the sacrifices, both
physical and spiritual, that came with war. The Speaker would be the man to
talk to, or Ikora. Either way, he would have to meet with them after he returned,
once the mission was done and the data secure.
He
caught up with Shiro at the exit of the hallway, leading into one final room.
It was well lit, with signs that still flickered with life despite centuries of
decay and lack of maintenance. Fallen prowled nervously inside, both on the
ground floor and on a balcony that took up the right side of the space. At the
end of the chamber, Koga could spy from where he was an ornate-looking Servitor
guarded by what were obviously Reavers, though they bore the mark of the House
of Winter rather than the Devils or Kings. It seemed that having an elite unit was
something universal to the Fallen Houses. Behind them all was a large door,
sealed tight and lit off-color yellow by an ancient lamp.
“That’s
a lot of them.” Kita noted, rather unnecessarily. Shiro nodded, gesturing to
the Servitor with a finger.
“That’s
Simiks-3.” The Hunter spoke quietly, as if he was worried that the Fallen might
hear him. “Winter’s Prime, Simiks, was destroyed a long time ago, and that
Servitor over there was one of the few built by it before it was scrapped.”
“What
makes it so special?” Koga asked, frowning. Aside from minor aesthetic
differences to the shell, it looked no different to any other Servitor that he
had fought before.
“It’s
designed for data collection.” Shiro answered. “If its here, the Fallen really
want to get inside the Archive.” He readied his sidearm, his knees bending to
get ready to run. “If we’re getting inside, it has to die.”
“That
can be arranged.” Koga muttered, trading his hand cannon for his fusion rifle.
The two Guardians waited by the entrance for a second, scoping out the future
battlefield for a moment longer, before both nodded to each other and hurried
through the doorway.
The
Fallen instantly noticed their arrival, and raised the alarm. Shouts, angry and
loud, roared from the mouths of the sentries that had spotted Koga and Shiro.
Simiks-3 growled commands in unintelligible machine-speak, and the Reavers
hurried to shield their care with their bodies, their weapons spitting obsidian
fire as they opened fire with their Shrapnel Launchers. Snipers on the balcony
joined the chorus, their line rifles humming to life before unleashing their
energy with a crack like thunder.
Koga
and Shiro scrambled for cover as the arc onslaught began, focusing first on
finding something heavy enough to take the brunt of the defensive fire over
trying to keep the enemy’s heads down. Shiro found a rather bulky looking
pillar to call his own, while Koga crouched behind a mostly-destroyed sign. He
rolled around the lip of his cover and lined up a shot at the nearest Vandal he
could see. The sniper must have realized what the Warlock was doing, because it
was trying to get out of the way, but its reactions were far too slow – the Nox
Cantor kicked against Koga’s shoulder as it unleashed a spread of void bolts,
disintegrating the unfortunate Vandal in an instant the moment it connected.
The
weight of the incoming fire suddenly shifted Koga’s way, his shot drawing the
attention of just about every alien with a gun in the room. Even Simiks joined
in, its mechanical roars announcing bolt after bolt of concentrated void power.
The Warlock could feel his cover start to crumble piece by piece – it would be
a matter of time before it was destroyed, leaving Koga exposed. “A little
help?” Koga shouted into comms, bracing himself for whatever was to come next.
Shiro
didn’t reply, at least not with words. His sidearm cracked lighning-fast, a
triple-burst with every squeeze of the trigger coming so fast that the weapon
seemed practically fully automatic. Dregs flashed out of existence as
concentrated arc energy from the weapon connected to deadly effect, followed by
a Vandal here or there. By the time Shiro had to reload, the remaining Fallen
had shifted attention to the veteran Hunter, though there wasn’t much left at
that point at all. Only the Reavers and Simiks were left, clearly aware of how
desperate their situation had become.
“I
have this.” Koga shouted, sprinting out of cover and letting his mind focus. He
jumped up, letting his Light carry him up and forwards, and let the void energy
form in his palm. He lunged his arm forward, and the Nova Bomb streaked
outwards, whistling before it impacted straight into the purple hull of the revered
Servitor. The explosion shook the ground, destroying Simiks instantly and
blowing the Reavers defending it away. They collapsed to the ground on opposite
ends of the room, dead. Weakly, Koga floated down, his stamina slowly returning
to him. Shiro holstered his sidearm and paced out from the pillar he had been
behind to meet with him at the foot of the Archive door.
Shiro
gave a low, impressed, whistle. “Nice shot, Warlock.” He said. Koga
straightened his posture, smiling thinly under his robes.
“Thanks.”
The Warlock replied. “You made quick work of those Fallen. I have never seen a
gun quite like yours.” He gestured towards the sidearm at Shiro’s hip. The
Hunter looked down at it, and patted the weapon softly as if it were a pet dog.
“I
call it ‘Trespasser.’” Shiro said. “It’s seen me through my time out here. It’s
not failed me yet.” He looked up from the gun, his focus returning to the task
at hand. “So, how do we get in?”
“That’s
where I come in.” Kita said, fizzling into existence over Koga’s shoulder. The
Ghost floated over to a panel, covered almost completely in vines, next to the
door. He began to interact with the console, a web of energy emitting from his
eye. “Radial A encryption.” Kita muttered to no one in particular. “They were
serious about keeping people out. I should be through it in a second.”
There
was a mechanical groan as ancient machinery slowly returned to life after
centuries of sleep. Koga and Shiro took a cautious step back, unsure of what
was about to happen. Slowly, the door began to slide open, inch-by-inch, until
the passageway was open. As soon as there was a crack, a gust of air blew out
from the Archive. The air was warm and stale, if Koga’s suit sensors were to be
trusted, and carbon dioxide-rich. Like opening a tomb, Koga realized.
“After
you.” Kita chirped, floating back to his Guardian before disappearing in a
flash of light. Koga looked at Shiro, who returned the glance. Quietly, the two
stepped through the door and into the unsettling silence beyond it.
<><><><><><><>
The
moniker “tomb” was an appropriate one. Not far from the doorway, just before a
long twisting stairway that led into the depths of the Archive itself, were a
half-dozen skeletons. The bleached white bones were lit by a cold wall-light,
the corpses casting long shadows on the floor. The bodies were surprisingly
intact; the bones left more or less in the position their owners had left them
in. All but two were separate from each other – the exceptions were bound
together in a lover’s embrace, a final act of intimacy before death took them.
“What
happened here?” Koga asked, his voice restrained with quiet horror. Kita
flashed back into reality, and hovered over to the macabre scene, examining the
bodies silently.
“I
can’t be sure, but it looks like these were all suicides.” The Ghost quietly
relayed. “There’s no sign of them being killed by another party, and their
positioning doesn’t match asphyxiation or starvation. They must have taken some
kind of poison.”
“There
was no way out.” Shiro spoke. “They locked themselves in during the Collapse,
and realized no help was coming. It was either this-“ he gestured at the bodies
on the floor “-or a slow death.”
“We
should get moving.” Kita said, slowly floating back to Koga. The Warlock
nodded, unable to tear his eyes away from the scene. There was a horror here
that was beyond him, a terror lost to time. Perhaps below would be the answers
to why they had been so afraid, and died so alone.
Carefully,
the two Guardians made their way down the winding staircase, red lights
illuminating the path ahead. Through one final chamber they went, and suddenly
the space opened up into an almost cavernous room. There were two floors to the
room, a balcony with catwalks running from one end to another, and great pillars
stretched from the floor to the ceiling. An entire section of the room was
dedicated to massive canisters that stretched well below the floor, a cold mist
rising from their surface. From the ceiling, pale white lights came alive,
illuminating the space in an eerie, cold glow.
“Incredible.”
Kita said, floating over the Warlock’s shoulder. “The Archive’s power is still
partially activated.”
“This
is amazing.” Shiro sounded awestruck, and he had good reason to – to walk the
halls of the Archive was to walk through a legend.
“Welcome,
Doctor Shim.” An artificial female voice boomed from speakers hidden in the
ceiling. The Guardians stopped in their tracks, the sound catching them
off-guard. “Please enter your security clearance code.” Koga looked over his
shoulder at Kita, who looked back at him.
“Doctor
Shim?” Kita repeated, surprised. “There must be a VI on site. Not something
smart enough to realize it’s been centuries.”
“Do
you have that code?” Koga asked.
“The
Cryptarch gave me several, I’m assuming the one I haven’t used yet is what the Archive
is looking for.” The Ghost replied. “I’ve detected a terminal, let’s go access
it.” On the Warlock’s HUD, a diamond appeared ahead. Koga nodded, and moved
slowly forward, Shiro walking behind him by a few paces.
“Be
quick.” Shiro said. “It’s only a matter of time before the Fallen come looking
for us.”
Koga
moved at a jog towards the objective, taking in the sights and sounds of the
chamber. It was a fantastic place, a testament to the resources of the Golden Age,
far more advanced than anything he had seen in the Cosmodrome. Old Russia, by
comparison, seemed decades behind what the Collective had at their disposal
during both of their hey-days.
“This
place is amazing.” Kita muttered, awestruck. “It’s bigger than the archives at
Old Accra.”
“Accra?”
Koga repeated.
“On
Earth.” The Ghost answered. “I wasn’t there when it was found, but it was a
major discovery at the time. Nothing like this, though. Not even close.”
The
echo of their footsteps against the hard steel floor was the only sound in the
chamber, save for the quiet humming of electronics and the faint hissing of the
evaporating nitrogen. Eventually, the Guardians walked up a small set of stairs
leading to a central computer pylon ringed with computer terminals. Kita
hovered towards the nearest one, and began to interact with it in his usual
manner. The terminal’s screen came to life, and it began to display a rush of
information too fast for the mind to process. Only the Ghost was capable of
keeping up with the stream.
“Thank
you, Doctor Shim.” The virtual intelligence spoke again, its synthetic female
voice stern but familiar. It had been designed to be a companion to the
scientists, and evidently not an intelligent one – a proper AI would have
noticed immediately that, within all likelihood, Dr. Shim had been dead for
centuries. It was entirely possible that one of the scattered skeletons a floor
above belonged to him.
“So
polite.” Kita said, beamused. “Well, let’s see what they-“ He stopped mid-sentence
when the terminal suddenly shut down. The lights flickered, and then turned
off, leaving Koga and Shiro alone in the now pitch-black chamber. Kita floated
to his keep’s shoulder, and projected a beam of light from his eye.
“What
happened?” Koga asked, surprised. Shiro’s Ghost did not come out to aid the
Hunter’s vision, mainly because it didn’t need to. The Exo could see well
enough in the dark, and he turned to look at Koga.
“The
Fallen are here, they must have a Servitor feeding off of the power.” He
answered, readying Trespasser. The sidearm hummed softly as power coursed
through it beneath the casing. In the distance, Koga could make out a faint
purple aura of energy, the sign of one of the Fallen machines prowling about.
That was the only thing he could see, however – the Fallen were likely cloaked,
and rushing forward to attack the Guardians before their presence was revealed.
“That
Servitor needs to go if I’m going to get the rest of the data.” Kita noted.
Koga nodded, and readied his hand cannon. He glanced over at Shiro, who glanced
back. Wordlessly, the two moved cautiously forward, weapons at the ready. A
Vandal could be hiding in any corner, waiting on any ledge. Vaguely, Koga
remembered a bit of advice his Ghost had given him when he had fled through the
dark corridors of the Cosmodrome wall: Fallen thrive in the dark.
“On
your left!” Kita shouted. Koga spun to face the direction, his eyes only just
now noticing the faint signature on the motion tracker of a cloaked Fallen. The
Vandal knew that his cover was blown, and it jumped from where it had been
hiding at Shiro. Its cloaking device failed as the alien lunged at the Hunter,
but at this point it didn’t matter. The Vandal readied a sword to impale Shiro,
who was moving to dodge out of the way of the arc saber. Koga whipped his Hoss
around and pulled the trigger, the hand cannon kicking against his palm like a
mule as it fired. The Vandal’s fall continued as the round punched straight
through its armor, collapsing on the ground in a heap.
“Thanks.”
Shiro mumbled, sounding vaguely embarrassed with himself. It did no favors to a
man’s ego to be saved by someone decades their younger. Eager to strut his
stuff, Shiro darted forward, his Trespasser firing streaks of blue energy into
the dark. Koga didn’t see the Hunter’s targets until after they were being
burned out of existence by the arc, a pack of cloaked Vandals that only the Exo
could in the dim lighting.
Enraged,
the Servitor came out of hiding, firing blasts of void energy in the direction
of Shiro. The Hunter dodged out of the way deftly, his sidearm chattering as he
fired on the move. The Servitor took almost the entire magazine to the eye, and
exploded unceremoniously as the rounds penetrated through the thing’s armor. Behind
where it had died, a panel sparked and flashed with unstable charge, the source
of the tap. Kita floated towards it, and almost immediately Koga could see the
Ghost begin a complicated series of transmats and energy transfers in order to
get crossed wires back into place and power flowing properly again. After a few
seconds, the lights returned with a flash.
“Doctor
Shim, intruders detected!” The synthetic voice announced in alarm, completely
unaware of the fact that minutes had passed between when the Fallen had entered
the chamber and now. “Initiate Protocol Nineteen!” Koga grimaced at that – no
doubt, the protocol was a data-wipe procedure in order to keep any invader from
learning the secrets of Golden Age humanity. Given that a stream of data had
appeared at the terminal earlier, it seemed to the Warlock that the last
survivors of the Collective had opted execute it.
“We’re
not done yet.” Shiro said sternly. “We haven’t killed the Captain leading the
attack.” He slapped a new magazine into his sidearm, and pulled back the slide.
“Captain, or Baron. We’ll see.”
A
howl echoed from the back of the room, in the direction of the terminal the
Guardians had accessed earlier. Despite himself, a chill ran down the Warlock’s
spine at the sound – as far as battle cries went, the Fallen ranked fairly
highly.
Koga
and Shiro ran back the way they came, weapons at the ready, but the Fallen did
not rush out to meet them. They were content to dig in and wait for them to
arrive, taking full advantage of the pillars and walls to use as cover. Whether
or not that would be enough to stop a single Guardian, let alone two, was a
question that the Fallen did not seem to have asked. They were determined to
hold onto their would-be prize, even if it was a suicide mission.
As
soon as the two got close, they began to take withering fire from the defending
Fallen, a wave of arc bolts streaming from a dozen Dregs and their Vandal
lieutenants. Behind them all was a burly-looking alien, draped in comparatively
extravagant cloths and holding a Shrapnel Launcher loosely in his upper arms,
his lower hands holding two arc daggers that sparked with pure energy. It was a
Baron, unmistakably, and the imposing raid-leader shouted his commands to his
underlings.
As
Koga and Shiro tried to find cover, the Dregs ceased firing their pistols and began
lobbing shock grenades towards them. They were trying to draw them out of
cover, into a hastily-created killing field maintained by the Vandals and the
Baron. Thankfully, most missed their marks, landing on different sides of the
crates and equipment that the twin Guardians were using for cover. The ones
that did flashed before exploding, the unleashed energy washing over their
Light like a wave. It stung slightly, but the power didn’t make it through
their shields, a relief. No one wanted to go down, not in the middle of a
firefight like this.
“We
can’t stay here!” Shiro shouted the obvious. “Do you have a Nova Bomb ready?”
Koga closed his eyes and tried to focus his Light. Energy pulsed in his hands
before fading. He opened his eyes again and shook his head.
“Not
yet.” The Warlock replied. “I need more time to focus the energy.” Shiro
smirked underneath his helmet.
“Don’t
worry, us Hunters are used to carrying your kind.” Shiro raised his hand into
the air, and in his hand materialized a gun made of starlight that burned as
brightly as the sun. The Golden Gun shined intensely, and Shiro brought his
forged Light down into a ready stance, flames licking his wrists. He rounded
the corner, and pulled the trigger. The Gun roared like someone had split the
world, and a streak of pure solar energy streaked straight from its “barrel”
into the body of a Vandal. The Vandal burned away to ash in an instant, one
second there and gone the next. Before any other Fallen could react, the Gun
cracked twice more, and two more Vandals fell, leaving only the Dregs and the
Baron.
It
took a brief moment for the Fallen to recognize what had just happen, and they
reacted with stark terror as they realized that three of their comrades had
ceased to exist in the flash of blinding Light. The Dregs scrambled away from
their positions, suddenly exposing themselves to Koga and his hand cannon. As
Shiro got back behind cover, recovering from the sudden drain of Light he had
committed himself to, the Warlock’s hand cannon barked over and over again as
he gunned down the fleeing Dregs. The few that survived were in full retreat,
leaving only the confused and bewildered Baron. That Baron roared in defiance
at the overwhelming power of the Guardians before he was gunned down
unceremoniously by Shiro’s Trespasser, the Hunter grinning through shallow
breaths.
There
was a silence as the remaining Fallen retreated the way they came, evacuating
via transmat in order to leave as quickly as they could. The silence continued
for a minute, then two, until finally Shiro broke it. “We’re clear.” The Hunter
said, holstering his Trespasser with a flourish. Koga did the same, fitting it
into the holster he had against the back of his waist.
“Good
work.” Koga commended, bowing his head slightly in respect.
“You
didn’t do half bad yourself, Warlock.” He replied, in that swarthy half-compliment
way of the Hunters. Kita flashed back into reality, apparating outside of Koga’s
armor where he had been hiding since the Baron had arrived.
“I’m
going to finish the tap.” The Ghost informed, floating over to the terminal. Koga
paced behind him, glancing down in order to not pace through the Dreg corpses
or the ashes of Shiro’s kills. Kita immediately continued his earlier tap, and
the terminal screen once more flickered to life before resuming its rapid
stream of data. A few seconds passed as the Ghost concluded his work, before
suddenly stopping the stream. Kita floated back to Koga, his movements happy
and quick.
“This
archive is amazing!” Kita said, elated. “There’s so much stored here! Pathways
to other galaxies, mappings of a Vex underworld, and a whole list of
information about ‘the Vault of Glass’!” Shiro stopped dead in his tracks.
“The
Vault?” The Hunter said, stunned. “There’s information on the Vault?” The Ghost
nodded at him.
“It’s
incomplete, but there’s a significant amount of data.” He replied. Kita turned
to look back at his keep. “We need to get this information back to the
Cryptarch. I’ll go ahead and let him know we found it.” The Ghost vanished into
the Warlock’s armor, leaving Shiro and Koga alone in the room. Shiro paced over
to the younger Guardian and patted him on the shoulder.
“Well,
looks like this is where we part ways.” The Hunter said. “Happy trails,
Warlock.”
“Good
luck to you, Hunter.” Koga replied, smiling and bowing softly. Shiro chuckled
before disappearing into the mist of transmat. A few seconds later, Koga vanished
as well, leaving the Archive alone as it had been before. The VI remained silent,
still operating as if everything was normal. As far as the programming was
concerned, it was still the Golden Age, and the Ishtar Collective was rolling
back the curtain of mystery on the universe around them all.
Perhaps
it would watch life return to the Archive once more.
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