McKinney, Jack (Brian Daley & James Luceno) - Robotech 03 - Homecoming

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Robotech: Homecoming
Book Three of the Robotech series
Copyright 1987 by Jack McKinney
CHAPTER ONE
The enemy armada, so vastly superior to us in numbers of fighting mecha and
aggregate firepower, continues to harry and harass us. But time and again the
Zentraedi stop short of all-out attack. They impede our long voyage back to
Earth, but they cannot stop us. I am still uncertain as to what good fortune is
working in the SDF-1's favor.
I do not point out any of this to the crew or refugees, however. It does no good
to tell grieving friends and loved ones that casualties could have been far
worse.
From the log of Captain Henry Gloval
Blue lines of enemy cannon fire streaked by Roy Fokker's cockpit, scorching one
of his Veritech fighter's tail stabilizers, ranging in for a final volley.
"Flying sense" the aviators called it, jargon that came from the
twentieth-century term "air sense": honed and superior high-speed piloting
instincts. It was something a raw beginner took a while to develop, something
that separated the novices from the vets.
And it was something Lieutenant Commander Roy Fokker, Skull Team leader
and Veritech squadron commander, had in abundance, even in the airlessness of a
deep-space dogfight.
Responding to his deft touch at the controls and his very will-passed
along to it by Robotech sensors in his flight helmet-Roy's Veritech fighter did
a wingover and veered onto a new vector with tooth-snapping force.
Thrusters blaring full-bore, the maneuver forces pressed him into his
seat, just as the enemy was concentrating more on his aim than on his flying.
The Zentraedi in the Battlepod on Roy's tail, trying so diligently to kill
him and destroy his Robotech fighter, was a good pilot, steady and cool like all
of them, but he lacked Roy's flying abilities.
While the giant alien gaped, astounded, at his suddenly empty gunsight
reticle, the Skull Team leader was already coming around behind the pod into the
kill position.
Around that fragment of the battle, an enormous dogfight raged as
Zentraedi pods and their Cyclops recon ships mixed it up ferociously with the
grimly determined human defenders in their Veritechs. The bright spherical
explosions characteristic of zero-g battle blossomed all around, dozens at a
time. Blue Zentraedi radiation blasts were matched by the Veritechs'
autocannons, which flung torrents of high-density armor-piercers at the enemy.
Roy was relieved to see that the SDF-1 was unharmed. Most of the fighting
seemed to be going on at some distance from it, although it was clear that the
enemy fleet had all the odds on its side. The Zentraedi armada easily numbered
over a million warships.
Roy located his wingman, Captain Kramer, in the furious engagement;
forming up for mutual security, he looked around again for the fantastic
Zentraedi mecha that had done so much damage a few minutes before. It had flown
rings around the Veritechs that had gone after it, taking Roy and the Skulls by
surprise and smashing their formation after cutting a swath through Vermilion
Team.
Whatever it was, it was unlike any Zentraedi weapon the humans had seen so
far. Unlike the pods, which resembled towering metal ostriches bristling with
guns, the newcomer was more human-shaped-a bigger, more hulking, and heavily
armed and armored version of the Veritechs' own Battloid mode. And fast-
frightfully fast and impossible to stop, eluding even the SDF-1's massive
defensive barrages.
Roy had expected to see the battle fortress under intense attack; instead,
the super dimensional fortress was cruising along unbothered and alone.
Moreover, transmissions over the tac net indicated that the Zentraedi pods and
Cyclopses were withdrawing. Roy couldn't figure that out.
He switched from the tac net to SDF-1's command net. There was word of the
new Zentraedi mecha. The thing had made it as far as SDF-1-getting in beneath
the fields of fire of most of the ship's batteries-then had suddenly withdrawn
at blinding speed, outmaneuvering gunfire and outracing pursuit. The ship had
suffered only minor damage, and the operations and intelligence people had
concluded that the whole thing had been a probing attack of some kind, a test of
a new machine and new tactics.
Roy didn't care as long as the battle fortress was still safe. He gathered
the Veritechs, ready to head home.
"Enemy pod," Skull Five called over the tac net. "Bearing one-niner-four-
seven."
Roy already had the computer reference on one of his situation screens. A
pod, all right, but evidently damaged and drifting, none of its weapons firing;
it was leaking atmosphere.
"Could be a trick," Skull Seven said. "What d' ya think, skipper? Do we
blast it out of the sky?"
"Negative; somebody may still be alive in there, and a live captive is
what the intelligence staff's been praying for." The incredible savagery of this
deep-space war was such that few survived as casualties. Alien or human, a
fighter almost always either triumphed or died, a simple formula. The humans had
never recovered a living enemy.
Besides, for very personal reasons, Roy was especially eager to see a
Zentraedi undergo interrogation.
"We're getting signals from it, nothing we can unscramble," a
communications officer reported over the command net.
Whatever was going on, none of the Zentraedi forces seemed to be turning
back for a rescue. Veritech fly-bys drew no fire; eyeball inspection and
instruments indicated that the damaged pod's main power source had been knocked
out but that some of its weapons were still functioning. Nevertheless, it passed
up several opportunities to blast away at nearby VTs.
"This is too good an opportunity to pass up," Gloval finally announced
over the main command net. "If there is a survivor aboard, we must get him into
the SDF-1 immediately."
"That thing could be booby-trapped-or its occupant could be!" a security
staff officer protested from one of Roy's display screens.
Gloval replied, "That is why we will push the pod closer to SDF-1-but not
too close-and connect a boarding tube to it. An EVA team will make a thorough
examination before we permit it any closer."
"But-" the officer began.
Roy cut in over the command net, "You heard the captain, so put a sock in
it, mac!" Roy was elated with Gloval's decision; it was only a slim hope, but
now there was hope of finding out what had happened to Roy's closest friend in
the world, Rick Hunter and Lisa Hayes and the others who'd disappeared on their
desperate mission to guide the SDF-1 through danger.
Roy began swinging into place, shifting his ship to Battloid mode. "Okay,
Skull Team; time to play a little bumper cars."
Two more Skulls went to Battloid, their Robotech ships transforming and
reconfiguring. When the shift was complete, the war machines looked like
enormous armored ultramech knights.
They joined Roy in pushing the inert pod back toward the battle fortress.
The men and women of the EVA-Extra Vehicular Activity-crews were efficient
and careful. They're also gutsy as hell, Roy reflected, his Battloid towering
over them in the boarding tube lock. But of course, everybody knew and honored
the legendary dedication and tenacity of the EVA crews.
Crowded into the boarding tube lock with two other Battloids behind him,
Roy watched expectantly. The huge lock, extending from the SDF-1 at the end of
nearly a mile of large-diameter tube, was a yawning dome on a heavy base,
equipped with every sort of contingency gear imaginable. The captured pod and
EVA crew and Roy's security detail took up only a small part of its floor space.
"Not beat up too bad," the EVA crew chief observed over the com net. "But
I dunno how much air it lost. What d' ya say, Fokker? Do we open 'er up?" She
was holding a thermotorch ready. She'd turned to gaze up at Roy's cockpit.
As ranking officer on the scene, Lt. Comdr. Roy Fokker had the
responsibility of advising Gloval. Tampering with the pod was very risky; they
could trigger some kind of booby trap humans couldn't even imagine, destroying
everyone there and perhaps even damaging the SDF-1.
But we can't go on fighting war this way! Roy thought. Knowing next to
nothing about these creatures we're up against or even why we're fighting-we
can't go on like this much longer!
"Cap'n Gloval, sir, I say we take a shot."
"Very well. Good luck to you," Gloval answered. "Proceed."
Roy reached down and put a giant hand in front of the EVA crew chief,
blocking her way as she approached the enemy mecha. "Sorry, Pietra; this is my
party."
His Battloid stood upright again and walked to the pod, shouldering its
autocannon, its footsteps shaking the deck. "Cover me," he told his teammates,
and they fanned out, muzzles leveled, for clear fields of fire. The Battloid's
forearms extruded metal tentacles, complicated waldos and manipulators, and
thermotorches.
"Just try not to break anything unnecessarily," Pietra warned, and led her
crew to the shelter of a blast shield.
Roy looked the pod over, trying a few external controls tentatively.
Nothing happened. He moved closer still, examining the pressure seals that ran
around the great hatch at the rear top of the pod's bulbous torso. Being this
close to a pod's guns had him sweating under his VT helmet.
"Careful, Roy," Kramer said quietly.
He didn't want to use the torch for fear of fire or explosion. He decided
to try simply pulling the pod's hatch open with the Battloid's huge, strong
hands. He ran his ship's fingers along the seams, feeling for a place to grab
hold...
The pod shook, rattled, and began to open.
Roy's Battloid leapt back, weapon aimed, as the hatch lifted up. Battloid
forefingers tightened on triggers, but there was no occupant immediately to be
seen.
However, the Battloids' external sound sensors relayed a remarkable
exchange, muffled and a little resonant, coming from the pod.
"Well, finally! Thank goodness! When you start bragging to your fighter
pilot buddies about this mission, boys, don't forget it took you just about
forever to get a simple hatch open!"
That voice was womanly and very pleasant, if a little arch and teasing.
Another, a young male's, sounding highly insulted, answered, "You weren't so hot
at getting in touch with your precious bridge, I noticed!"
If this is some kind of trick, we're up against the zaniest enemies in the
universe, Roy thought.
"I thought you both did very well," another male voice said calmly, humbly
placatingly.
"Ah, look out, Max," the first male voice said. "And let's get outta
here."
There was a certain amount of grunting and straining then, and at one
point the female voice yelled, "Ben, if you don't get your big foot out of my
face, I'm going to break it off!" A vociferous argument broke out.
"Everybody shut up!" the first male voice screamed. "Ben, Max: Gimme a
boost up, here."
Moments later, two flight-gloved, human-size hands gripped the edge of the
hatch. A dark mop of black hair rose into view.
Rick Hunter, standing on the head of the husky Ben Dixon, hauled himself
up triumphantly.
"Hold your fire! We're back! Roy, we escaped from the Zentraedi-um..."
Three Battloids stood there looking at him, hands resting casually on the
upturned muzzles of their grounded autocannon, heads cocked to one side or the
other. Their attitude seemed to be one of resigned disgust.
"We escaped!" Rick repeated, thinking perhaps they hadn't heard him. "Man,
have we got stories to tell! We were in an enemy ship! We met their leaders! We
shot our way out in this pod! We...we...What's wrong?"
Roy couldn't tell Rick how overjoyed and relieved he was; it would have
spoiled their friendship.
"We were hoping for a POW," he said. "Boy, is Captain Gloval gonna be sore
at you for not being a Zentraedi."
CHAPTER TWO
The Zentraedi version of psychology could only be termed primitive, of course,
except as it applied to such things as maintaining military discipline and
motivating warriors. And even there, it was brutal and straightforward.
No surprise, then, that when those particular three Zentraedi were quick to
accept their spying mission, Breetai scarcely thought twice about it.
But of course, he hadn't spent as much time watching transmissions of the
swimsuit portion of the Miss Macross contest.
Zeitgeist, Alien Psychology
The SDF-1'S survival of the latest Zentraedi attack had buoyed morale all
through the ship-at least in most cases; there were those whom the lessons of
war had made too wary to quickly believe in good fortune. Even with Earth
looming large before it and the long, dark billions of miles safely crossed, the
battle fortress was dogged by the enemy-now more than ever. Continued vigilance
was imperative.
One of those acutely aware of the continuing danger was Claudia Grant, who
was acting as the vessel's First Officer in Lisa Hayes's absence. Though Claudia
and Lisa were friends, Claudia had always felt a little put off by Lisa's
single-minded devotion to duty, her severity. But now, elevated to the
responsibilities of her new position-especially at this moment, with Gloval off
the bridge-Claudia was seeing things in a different light.
The members of her usual watch, the female enlisted-rating techs, Sammie,
Kim, and Vanessa, were off duty for a long-postponed pass into Macross City.
Lisa, Claudia, and the other three had formed something very much like a family,
with Gloval as patriarch; they had become a highly efficient team both under
everyday stresses and demands and under fire.
The turmoil of the war had brought an assortment of other techs to the
bridge on relief watches, and Claudia didn't trust any of them to really know
what they were doing, just as Lisa hadn't. So even though she was almost out on
her feet with fatigue, Claudia had refused to be relieved of her duties as long
as Gloval was away.
There was no telling how long that would be. The glorious news of the
rescue of Lisa and the others was tarnished by the fact that the SDF-1 was still
surrounded by the enemy armada. Debriefings and command conferences might go on
for a very long while.
Claudia looked up wearily from her instruments as she heard one of the
relief-watch techs say wistfully, "Boy, is that beautiful! D' you think we'll
ever set foot on Earth again?"
The tech had brought up a long-range image of their blue-white homeworld
on the screen before her.
Claudia was a tall woman in her late twenties, with exotic good looks and
glowing honey-brown skin. Her dark eyes twinkled and shone when she was happy,
and flashed when she was angry. Right now, they were flashing like warning
beacons.
"Why don't you go ask the commander of that Zentraedi fleet? Go ahead,
take a look at them! Maybe they've gone away!"
The tech, a teenage girl who wore her auburn hair in a pageboy and still
didn't look quite comfortable in uniform, swallowed and went a little pale.
Claudia Grant's temper was well known, and she had the size and speed to back it
up when she needed to.
The tech worked her controls obediently, bringing up a visual of the
Zentraedi fleet. They were all around the battle fortress, standing out of range
of the ship's secondary batteries and lesser weapons. They were like a seaful of
predatory fish-cruisers and destroyers and smaller craft in swarms, blocking out
the stars. And farther away, the instruments registered their flagship: nine
miles of armor and heavy weapons.
The tech gasped, eyes big and round.
"Still there, huh?" Claudia nodded, knowing full well they were. "All
right, then, let's not hear any more about wanting to go home; not until our
job's done. Understood?"
The tech hastened to say, "Aye aye!" as did the rest of the watch.
Claudia eased off a bit, looking around at the watch members. "There are a
lot of folks depending on us. And I guarantee you, you don't want to know what
it feels like to let people down in a situation like this."
In a far-off compartment of the SDF-1, three strange beings skulked and
crept around. They were not Zentraedi, at least not any longer; they were of
human scale. But neither could they fairly be called human, though that was the
appearance they gave; until a few hours before they had been members of the
giant warrior race.
The devastatingly fast and ferocious enemy mecha that had wreaked such
havoc among the VTs-the one the humans hadn't seen before-had put this threesome
aboard. The one thing they could accurately be called was "spies."
They had hastily retreated from the metal canister in which they'd
arrived. The mighty Quadrono Battalion mecha that had, in its lightning raid,
torn open a section of the SDF-1's hull to toss them inside had also
(understandably enough) attracted a certain amount of attention. If the canister
was found before it quietly dissolved, it might set off a massive search.
The smallest of the three, Rico, said, "Okay, let's start spying!" He was
dark-haired and wiry.
The sturdy Bron, a head taller, said sourly, "But we can't spy in these
clothes; they'll know who we are!"
Even though the Zentraedi military had little experience in espionage-out-
and-out battle was what the warrior race preferred-it was obvious that Bron was
right. The Zentraedi fleet carried no wardrobe in human size, of course, and so
the three wore improvised, shapeless knee-length robes of coarsely woven blue
sackcloth. The sleeveless robes were gathered at the waist with a turn or two of
Zentraedi string, more or less the thickness of clothesline. Not surprisingly,
the spies were barefoot.
It all had them a bit shaken, this matter of dress. The Zentraedi drew
much of their sense of self from their uniforms. The best the trio had been able
to do was agree to maintain the attitude that they were wearing the special
attire of an elite unit. A very small elite unit.
Konda, nearly Bron's height but lean and angular, shook his hair back out
of his eyes. His hair was purple, but intelligence reported that the color
wouldn't stand out much in light of current human fads. "Then, let's find some
other clothes," Konda proposed.
They'd been given some briefings and rather broad guidelines by Zentraedi
intelligence officers, but to a great extent they were improvising as they went
along. Still, Konda's idea made a lot of sense. The spies leapt from hiding and
set off down a passageway, slipping among the shadows and peering around
corners, much more conspicuous than if they'd simply strolled along chatting.
Naturally, SDF-1 had no internal security measures against Zentraedi
spies, since it was generally assumed that a fifty-foot-high armored warrior
wouldn't be difficult to spot in the average crowd.
There followed a period of ducking and darting, of peeping into various
compartments and avoiding any contact with the occasional passerby. The spies
knew the general location of the battle fortress's bridge and worked their way
in that direction, since the ship's nerve center was something the Zentraedi
wanted very much to know about.
As the motley trio peeked out from concealment, they heard a very strange
and appealing sound, something none of them had ever heard before. It was human;
Konda wondered if it was some alien form of singing, even if it didn't sound
very military.
The sound was coming in their direction. They yanked themselves back out
of sight. The oddly interesting sound stopped, and the spies heard human female
voices.
"Where d' you want to go tonight, Sammie?"
There was the sound of slender shoe heels clicking along the deck. The
human females were coming their way, so the spies drew back even deeper into
darkness.
"Oh, I don't really care, as long as I can get out of this uniform,"
Sammie answered.
"Mine feels like it'll be glad to get off me!" Vanessa said.
The Terrible Trio giggled together again; they'd been laughing with
delight ever since the relief watch had shown up on the bridge to give them a
brief taste of freedom. The hatch to a complex of enlisted ratings' quarters
compartments slid open for them and they entered. The hatch closed, shutting off
the giggles.
The accelerated course in human language the three spies had been given
let them understand the words perfectly, but the content was another question
entirely. "What did all that mean?" Konda wondered, rubbing feet that had been
made very, very cold by the deck plates.
Little Rico was thinking of a uniform wanting to get off somebody. Can
these creatures have sentient clothing? Perhaps with artificial enhancements?
That would indicate a supreme control of Protoculture! "It seems these
Micronians have some great powers."
"Micronians" had always been a derogatory Zentraedi term for small
humanoid beings such as Homo sapiens. Now, the spies weren't so sure that the
condescension was justified.
Bron nodded. "Well, let's keep watch and see what else we can find out."
It seemed like a very long time before the hatch reopened. The Terrible
Trio emerged, each dressed for a night on the town in a different, fetching
outfit. They laughed and joked, going off in the opposite direction, leaving the
very faint but heady fragrance of three perfumes in the passageway.
"Different clothes!" Rico exclaimed softly. With different powers,
perhaps, specialized for a particular mission?
"I know!" Bron said with a certain surprising emphasis.
"Do these people change uniforms every time they do something?" Konda
posed a tactical question:
But why, then, did the clothes all look different? The spies somehow knew
what they'd just seen weren't uniforms. But how could the Micronians bear to
lose their identity by not wearing their uniforms? It was all too unsettling for
words.
Not to mention the fact that the three Micronian females looked and
sounded, well, somehow delightful. Beguiling. It was very puzzling. The three
looked at one another.
"Incredible," Bron summarized.
"Uh, but what does it all mean?" Rico said with troubled brow.
Konda rubbed his jaw in thought. "They changed their clothes in that
compartment down there. So that means...we can get disguises!"
"Good thinking!" Bron cried.
"Let's go!" Rico exploded.
They dashed down the passageway, bare feet slapping the deck. After first
making sure nobody was still inside, they piled through the hatch together,
anxious to blend in with the Micronians. And though none of them admitted it to
the others, they were all thinking of those three intriguing Micronian females
but trying not to.
They'd had a previous close encounter with the human enemy, monitoring
SDF-1 transmissions that were confusing and puzzling but ever so fascinating.
What they'd seen was the swimsuit competition of the ship's Miss Macross
pageant. Though they hadn't been able to make head or tail of it, and neither
had Zentraedi intelligence analysts, the experience had made Rico, Bron, and
Konda eager to sign up for the spying mission.
Inside, various small subcompartments opened off a narrow central
passageway. The spies began searching through them, looking for garments that
might fit.
They approached the clothes tentatively, timidly. The human fabric
constructions seemed unthreatening enough, hanging there docilely; but if they
somehow incorporated Protoculture forces, there might be no limit to what they
could do. The threesome moved as carefully as if they were in the midst of a
pack of sleeping Dobermans.
When at last they worked up the nerve to actually touch a dangling cuff
and nothing catastrophic happened, the Zentraedi proceeded with more confidence.
A pattern emerged: The lockers in those quarters on the forward side of
the passageway tended to have rather recognizable clothing suited to normal
activities, even if the cut was a little strange. The ones on the aft side,
however, had frilly things, as well as trousers and the skirt-type uniforms the
females had worn, as well as more elaborate designs of the same undivided lower
garments.
After a lot of rummaging and trying on, Konda and Rico, now in human
attire, stepped back into the main passageway. Konda wore dark slacks and a
yellow turtleneck, settling the collar uncomfortably. Rico had found blue
trousers and a red pullover.
"Hey, Bron, let's get moving!" Rico called.
"This uniform is very unusual," Bron said, lumbering to catch up. "But
it's all I can find that fits me. I dressed to conform with a two-dimensional
image I saw in that compartment. What d' you think?"
Bron held out the hem of his pleated skirt, standing awkwardly in the
large pumps he'd found. His white silk blouse was arranged correctly, its fluffy
bow tie and the tasteful string of pearls exactly corresponding to the fashion
photo he'd seen.
"Y' look fine, Bron! Now, let's get started," Rico snapped. Bron looked
wounded.
Rico was edgy; he and the others had come aboard unarmed, since all
Zentraedi weapons were now far too big for them to handle or hide. They'd found
no Micronian weapons at all in the humans' personal quarters except those of a
makeshift and unsuitable sort. How could these creatures feel any peace of mind
without at least a few small arms close at hand? It all made less and less
sense.
Bron glowered, and Rico subsided; it was unwise to get the big fellow
irritated. Bron gave his skirt a final hitch and said, "Ready."
They fell in together and trooped off in the direction the Terrible Trio
had gone, ready to bring triumph and glory to the mighty Zentraedi race.
CHAPTER THREE
We had met the enemy, and he wasn't us. Then we wound up in front of some of
"us," and they were the enemy.
Lisa Hayes, Recollections
"Please continue your report, commander Hayes," the captain bade her.
They sat in high-back chairs along the gleaming conference room table, all
in a row. A short time ago they'd been greeted as heroes, but now-despite
Captain Gloval's comforting presence-Lisa felt very much as if she were sitting
before a board of inquiry.
Lisa, Rick, Ben, and Max looked across the long, wide table at the row of
four member officers of the evaluation team. Only one of them held rank in one
of the combat arms, Colonel Maistroff, an Air Group officer with a reputation as
a martinet and stuffed shirt.
The others were intelligence and operations staffers, though the bearded
and balding Major Aldershot was supposed to be something of a mainstay over at
G3 Operations and had earned a Combat Infantry Star in his youth. The team
studied the escapees as if they were something on a microscope slide.
Gloval, presiding at the head of the table, was encouraging Lisa. "You are
certain that what you've made is a fair estimate? At this Zentraedi central base
there are really that many more ships than we've already seen?" The comlink
handset next to him began beeping softly; he ignored it.
Lisa thought carefully. So many things about their captivity in the
planetoid-size enemy base, a spacefold jump away-somewhere else in the universe-
were astounding and unnerving that she rechecked her recollections again,
minutely.
Rick looked over to her, and their eyes met. He didn't nod; that might
have tainted her testimony. But she saw that he was ready to back her up.
"Yes, sir, at least that many. And quite possibly millions more. I made a
conservative estimate."
Gloval, hand on the phone, looked to Rick. "Truly?"
Rick nodded. "Yes, sir. That many."
Gloval listened to the handset for a moment, then replaced it in its
cradle without responding. "Based on all combined reports," he resumed, "our
computers place the total enemy resources at somewhere between four and five
million ships."
"Sir, forgive me, but that's ridiculous," one team member said. From the
security branch, he was the officer who'd been all for destroying the escapees'
pod. "Our projections are based on the most accurate data and statistical
techniques known.
"No species could accumulate that sort of power! And even if they could,
they couldn't possibly remain at the primitive social and psychological level of
these aliens!"
"Now, granted, we're seeing a great deal of military display here," the
Intel man, a portly fellow in his early thirties, added. "But how many of those
ships have actually proved themselves to be combat-ready? A comparative handful!
No, Captain; I think what we're seeing is just a bluff. And I think your people
here have been taken in by it. My analysis is that Commander Hayes and her party
were permitted to escape so that they could bring us this...hysterical report
and demoralize us."
"Permitted?" Ben Dixon was halfway out of his chair, the big hands
clenched into fists, about to leap across the table and pummel the intel
officer. "D' you know how many times we almost got killed? How close we came to
not making it? When was the last time you saw any action, you-"
"Captain!" the intelligence officer burst out to Gloval by way of
complaint.
"That will do!" Gloval thundered, and there was sudden silence as Max
Sterling and Rick Hunter pulled Ben back.
Having shown his Jovian side for an instant, Gloval lapsed back into a
reasonable voice. "Gentlemen, let's hear the entire report before discussing
it." It wasn't a suggestion, and everybody understood that. The debriefing team
subsided.
Lisa had thought her words out carefully. "In the course of our captivity,
we observed that the aliens have absolutely no concept of human emotions.
They've been groomed entirely for war. And their society is organized along
purely military lines.
"It appears that they've increased their physical size and strength
artificially through genetic manipulation and that they also have the ability to
reverse the process."
The others present were studying the few video records she'd managed to
make surreptitiously during captivity, but Lisa's memory, with Rick's, Ben's,
and Max's, provided vivid and chilling recollections. They'd witnessed Zentraedi
trans-vid records of the destruction of an entire planet, seen the gigantic
protoculture sizing chambers the aliens used to manipulate their size and
structure, felt the deathly squeeze of Commander in Chief Dolza's fist around
them.
And something else had happened, something Lisa could only bring herself
to refer to obliquely. The enemy leaders had been repulsed, but fascinated, by
the human custom of kissing. At their demand, and to ascertain what effect it
would have on them, Lisa and Rick had kissed, long and deeply, on an enemy
conference table as big as a playing field.
None of the four escapees had mentioned the kiss. Lisa still wasn't sure
exactly what it was she'd felt afterward. She suspected that Rick was also a
little confused, in spite of his love affair with the girl called Minmei. Max
and Ben had kept silent, Rick's friends as well as his wingmates.
Lisa finished, "And I think this last part is very important: While they
examined and interrogated us, they constantly made reference to something they
called -'Protoculture.'"
The intel officer who had almost been attacked by Ben Dixon tilted his
chair back arrogantly. "That's pure fantasy."
His security buddy added, "And were there any little green men?"
Major Aldershot glanced around at him stiffly, the ends of his waxed
mustache seeming to bristle. "I will point out that the commander is a much-
decorated soldier. This insulting levity is unbecoming from someone who has yet
to prove himself under fire." It was the most he'd said all morning.
"What is this `Protoculture'?" Gloval put things back on track.
Lisa hesitated before answering. "It's apparently something that relates
to their use of Robotech. I'm not sure, but they think that Protoculture is the
highest science in the universe and that somehow we possess some of its deepest
secrets."
Colonel Maistroff said with a sly grin to the other evaluation team
officers, "Too deep for me!" and guffawed at his own joke.
The intel and security officers roared spitefully along with him as Lisa's
cheeks colored and Rick felt himself flush in anger.
"Silence!" Gloval barked. It was instantly quiet. "This is a very grave
moment. This alien armada has pursued and harried us across the solar system for
almost a year and yet has never made an all-out attempt to destroy us; perhaps
we do possess a power in the SDF-1 that we don't fully understand."
That was a good bet, the way Rick saw it. Even the brilliant Dr. Lang
understood only a fraction of the alien ship's secrets, and he was the one who
had masterminded its reconstruction from a burned and battered wreck.
Maistroff fixed Lisa with a gimlet stare, red-faced at being rebuked in
front of junior officers. "Commander Hayes, is that all?"
Lisa met his glare. "Yes, sir, that's all."
Ben whispered to Rick, "I don't think they believe us." Ben wasn't exactly
point man on the genius roster, and the idea that such a thing could happen had
never occurred to him until the debriefing was well along.
"It's probably the dishonest expression on your face," Rick whispered back
absently.
Maistroff placed both hands flat on the table and turned to Gloval. "Do
you really believe this wild tale? It's enemy trickery! Hallucinations!"
Gloval began stoking up his evil-smelling briar, tamping the tobacco
slowly with his thumb, pondering. "This information must be correlated and
reported to Earth immediately, whether I believe it or not-"
Maistroff interrupted him, saying tightly and too quickly, "I'll send a
coded message right away-"
"Colonel Maistroff." It was Gloval's turn to interrupt. "No, you won't."
He lit his briar while they all gaped at him.
Gloval said, "We've got to break through the enemy elements that stand
between the SDF-1 and our homeworld."
The evaluation team was aghast, Maistroff shouting, "We can't make it!"
Rick looked around and saw that everybody on his side of the table thought
it was a magnificent idea. Gloval rose. "At our current speed, we are only two
days from Earth, and they must have this information." He started for the hatch.
Maistroff scowled at Gloval's back. "And then what?"
The captain answered over his shoulder. "And then nothing. We just await
orders while we relax, Colonel Maistroff."
He cut through all their protests. "That will be all, gentlemen."
Gloval turned to the escapees. "And as for you four..." They all shot to
their feet at rigid attention.
"At least for the time being, you'll be relieved of duty. You've earned a
little R and R. You're dismissed."
The four saluted him happily. "Enjoy yourselves," Gloval said gruffly;
puffing his pipe. They did a precise right-face and marched out of the
conference room in style. But at the last moment, Gloval removed his pipe from
his mouth and called, "One moment, Lisa."
The others continued on. Lisa paused at the hatch and turned back to him.
"Yes, Captain?"
"Personally, I am inclined to believe that your report is accurate.
However..."
"Certainly," she said. "Thank you, Captain. I know you believe in us, and
I appreciate that."
"I'm glad you understand."
摘要:

Robotech:HomecomingBookThreeoftheRobotechseriesCopyright1987byJackMcKinneyCHAPTERONETheenemyarmada,sovastlysuperiortousinnumbersoffightingmechaandaggregatefirepower,continuestoharryandharassus.ButtimeandagaintheZentraedistopshortofall-outattack.TheyimpedeourlongvoyagebacktoEarth,buttheycannotstopus....

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