McKinney, Jack (Brian Daley & James Luceno) - Robotech 01 - Genesis

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Robotech: Genesis
Book One of the Robotech series
Copyright 1987 by Jack McKinney
PROLOGUE
I've brought death and suffering in such magnitude, Zor thought. It's only right that I spent the
balance of my life bringing life.
He looked out from the observation bay of his temporary groundside headquarters upon a
planetary surface that had been lifeless a mere four days before. He saw before him a plain
teeming with thriving vegetation. Already the Flowers of Life were sprouting, reaching their
eager, knob-tipped shoots into the sunshine.
Zor, supreme intellect of his race and Lord of the Protoculture, nodded approvingly. At
times the memories of his own past deeds, much less those of his species, seemed enough to drive
him mad. But when he looked down on a scene like this, he could forget the past and be proud of
his handiwork.
And above him, blocking out the light of the nearby primary, his gargantuan starship and
super dimensional fortress was escaping, as he had directed. The satisfaction he felt from that
and from seeing the germinated Flowers made it much easier to accept the fact that he was about to
die...
He was tall and slender, with a lean, ageless face and a thick shock of bright starlight
hair. The clothes he wore were graceful, regal, cut tight to his form, covered by a short cloak
that he now threw back over one shoulder.
Zor could hear the alarm signals ring behind him, and the booming voice of a Zentraedi
announced, "Warning! Warning! Invid troop carriers are preparing to land! All warriors to their
Battlepods!"
Zor gazed away from the beauty of the exterior scene, back to the harsh reality of the
base, as towering Zentraedi dashed about, preparing for battle. Even though the appearance of the
Invid had taken them by surprise, even though they were badly outnumbered and at a disadvantage
since the enemy held the high ground, there was a certain eagerness to the Zentraedi; war was
their life and their reason for being.
In that, they had met their match and more in the Invid. Zor found bitter irony in how his
own poor judgment and the cruelty of the Robotech Masters-his masters-had turned a race of
peaceful creatures, once content with their single planet and their introspective existence, into
the most ferocious species in the known universe.
While subordinates strapped armor and weapons on his great body, Dolza, supreme commander
of the Zentraedi, glared down at Zor. His colossal head, with its shaven, heavy-browed skull, gave
him the aspect of a stone icon. "We should have departed before the Flowers germinated! I warned
you!"
Dolza raised a metal-plated fist big enough to squash Zor. Unafraid, Zor looked up at him,
though his faithful aide, Vard, was holding a hand weapon uneasily. Around them the base shook as
armored Zentraedi and their massive fighting pods raced to battle stations.
"What of the super dimensional fortress?" Dolza demanded. "What have you done with it?"
"I have sent it away," Zor answered calmly. "To a place far removed from this evil,
senseless war. It is already nearing the edge of space, too fast and far too powerful for the
Invid to stop."
That much, Dolza knew, was true. The dimensional fortress, Zor's crowning technological
achievement, was the mightiest machine in existence. Nearly a mile long, it incorporated virtually
everything Zor had discovered about the fantastic forces and powers springing from the Flowers of
Life.
"Sent it where?" Dolza demanded. Zor was silent. "If I weren't sworn by my warrior oath to
protect you"-Dolza's immense fist hovered close-"I would kill you!"
A few pods from the ready-reaction force were already on the scene: looming metal battle
vehicles big enough to hold one or two Zentraedi, their form suggested that of a headless ostrich,
with long, broad breastplates mounting batteries of primary and secondary cannon.
"I don't expect you to understand," Zor said in carefully measured tones, as explosions
and shock waves shook the base. They could hear the Zentraedi communication net crackling with
reports of the Invid landing.
"You were created to fight the Invid; that is what you must do," Zor told the giant as the
headquarters' outer wall heaved and began to crumble. "Go! Fulfill your Zentraedi imperative!"
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As Zor spun and ducked for cover, Vard shielded him with his own body. Dolza turned to
give battle as the wall shuddered and cracked wide. Through the showering rubble leapt Invid shock
troopers, the enemy's heaviest class of mecha, advanced war machines. Forged from a superstrong
alloy, bulky as walking battleships, the mecha resembled a maniac's vision of biped insect
soldiers.
They were every bit as massive as the Zentraedi pods, and even more heavily armored.
Concentrated fire from the few pods already on the scene-blue lances of blindingly bright energy
penetrated the armor of the first shock trooper to appear. Even as the Invid returned fire with
streams of annihilation discs, the seams and joints of its armor expanded under the overwhelming
pressure from the eruptions within. It exploded into bits of wreckage and white-hot shrapnel that
bounced noisily off the pods' armor.
But a trio of shock troopers had crowded in behind the first, and a dozen more massed
behind them. Annihilation discs and red plasma volleys quartered the air, destroying the
headquarters command center and equipment, setting fires, and blasting pods to glowing scraps or
driving them back.
Armored Zentraedi warriors, lacking the time to reach their pods, rushed in to fight a
desperate holding action, spraying the Invids with hand-held weapons, dodging and ducking,
advancing fearlessly and suffering heavy casualties.
A swift warrior ran in under an Invid shock trooper, holding his weapon against a
vulnerable joint in its armor and then triggering the entire charge all at once, pointblank. The
explosion blew the Invid's leg off, toppling it, but the Zentraedi was obliterated by the
detonation.
Elsewhere, an Invid mecha seized a damaged pod that could no longer fire, ripped the pod
apart with its superhard metal claws, then dismembered the wounded Zentraedi within.
Scouts, smaller Invid machines, rushed in behind the shock troopers to scour the base.
It took only moments for one to find Zor; the Invid had been searching for him for a long
time and were eager for revenge.
As the scout lumbered toward them, Vard tried to save his lord by absorbing the first
blast himself, firing his little hand weapon uselessly at the Invid monster. He partially
succeeded, but only at the cost of his own life-immolated in an instant by a disc. The force of
the blast drove Zor back and scorched him.
The rest of the discs in the salvo were ignited by the explosion, but, having been flung
aside, Zor was spared most of their fury. Still, he'd suffered terrible injuries-skin burned from
his body until bone was exposed, lungs seared by fire, bones broken from the concussion and the
fall, tremendous internal hemorrhaging. He knew he would die.
Before the Invid scout could finish the job, Dolza was there, firing at it with his
disruptor rifle, ordering the remaining pods to concentrate their fire on it. "Zor is down! Save
Zor!" he thundered. Switching to his helmet communicator, he tried to raise his most trusted
subordinate.
"Breetai! Breetai! Where are you?"
The scout was blown to fiery bits in the withering fusillade, but its call had gone out;
the other scouts and the shock troopers were homing in on their archenemy.
Dolza, with the remaining warriors and pods, formed a desperate defensive ring,
unflinchingly ready to die according to their code.
Suddenly there was a massive volley from the right. Then an even more intense one from the
left. To Dolza's astonishment, they were directed at the Invid.
Breetai had arrived at the head of reinforcements. Some of them were wearing only body
armor like himself, but most were in tactical or heavily armed officers' Battlepods. The Invid
line began to collapse before a storm of massed fire. More pods were arriving all the time. Dolza
couldn't understand how-an invasion force was descending by the thousands from a moon-size Invid
hive ship, its troopers as uncountable as insects. Surely the base must be covered by a living,
swarming layer of the enemy.
But the enemy was being driven back, and Breetai was leading a countercharge on foot, just
as a small wedge of shock troopers threatened to make good on a suicide rush at Dolza and Zor. A
disc struck a pod near Breetai even as he was firing left and right with his rifle; blast and
shrapnel hit his head and the right side of his face.
Breetai dropped, skull aflame, but the Zentraedi countercharge went on-somehow-to drive
the Invid back to the breach in the wall.
Finally Dolza wearily lowered his glowing rifle muzzle. Pursuit of the retreating Invid
could be left to the field commanders. He began to take reports from the newcomers, thus learning
the details of the unexpected Zentraedi victory.
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Most of the Invid had been diverted in an attempt to stop or board the dimensional
fortress and had been wiped out. Even now, word of the attack was going back to the Robotech
Masters; a punitive raid would have to be mounted. Breetai was being attended to by the healers
and would live, though he would be scarred for life.
But all of that was of little moment to Dolza. He looked down on the smoking, broken body
of Zor. Healers crowded around the fallen genius with their apparatus and medicines, but Dolza had
seen enough combat casualties to know that Zor was beyond help.
Zor knew it as well as Dolza. Drifting in a near delirium, feeling surprisingly little
pain, he heard exchanges about the dimensional fortress. He smiled to himself, though it hurt his
scorched face, thankful that the starship had escaped.
Once more, he had the Vision that had made him decide to dispatch the ship; as the master
of the limitless power of Protoculture, with his matchless intellect, he had access to hidden
worlds of perception and invisible paths of knowledge.
He saw again an infinitely beautiful, blue-white world floating in space, one blessed with
the treasure that was life. He sensed that it was or would be the crux of transcendent events, the
crossroads and deciding place of a conflict that raged across galaxies.
A column of pure mind-energy rose from the planet, a pillar of dazzling force a hundred
miles in diameter, crackling and swaying, swirling like a whirlwind, throwing out shimmering
sheets of brilliance, climbing higher and higher into space all in a matter of moments.
As he had before, Zor felt humbled before the mind-cyclone's force. Then its pinnacle
unexpectedly gave shape to a great bird, a phoenix of mental essence. The firebird of
transfiguration spread wings wider than the planet, soaring away to another plane of existence,
with a cry so magnificent and sad that Zor forgot his impending death. He wept for the dreadful
splendor of what was to come, two tears flowing down his burnt cheeks.
But he was buoyed by a renewed conviction that the dimensional fortress must go to that
blue-white planet.
The sounds of the last skirmishes came from the distance as Zentraedi rooted out and
executed the last of the Invid troops. Dolza stood looking down at Zor's blackened body as its
life slipped away despite all that the healers could do. Dolza suspected that Zor did not wish-
would not permit himself-to be saved.
Whatever Zor's plan, there was no changing it now. The ship itself, along with a handful
of Zentraedi loyal to Zor alone, had jumped beyond the Robotech Masters' reach-at least for the
time being.
It was of little comfort to Dolza that final transmissions from the dimensional fortress,
in the moments before transition through a spacefold, indicated that the traitors aboard had been
badly wounded during the battle to get past the Invid surprise attack.
"Zor, if you die, the mission is over and I must return in defeat and humiliation," Dolza
said.
"I have thwarted the Robotech Masters' plan to control the universe." Zor had to pause to
cough and regain his breath, with a rattle in it that spoke of dying. "But a greater, finer
mission is only beginning, Dolza..."
Zor coughed again and was still, eyes closed forever.
Dolza stood before a screen that was large even for the Zentraedi. Before him was the
image of a Robotech Master. Dolza spoke obsequiously.
"... and so we have no idea where the dimensional fortress is, at least for the moment."
The Master's ax-keen face, with its hawkish nose, flaring brows, and swirling, storm-
whipped hair, showed utter fury. Dolza wasn't surprised; Zor, who'd given the Masters the key to
their power, and the mighty dimensional fortress gone, at a stroke! Dolza wondered if the Invid
realized just how much damage they'd inflicted in a raid that would otherwise have been an
insignificant skirmish.
The Robotech Master's voice was eerily lifeless, like a single-sideband transmission. "The
dimensional fortress must be recovered at all costs! Organize a search immediately; we shall
commit the closest Zentraedi fleet to the mission at once, and all others will join in the effort
if necessary."
Dolza bowed to the image. "And Zor, my lord? Shall I have his remains interred in his
beloved garden?"
"No! Freeze them and bring them back to us personally. Guard them well! We may yet extract
information from his cellular materials."
With that, the Master's image disappeared from the screen.
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"Hail, Dolza! Breetai reporting as ordered."
Dolza looked him over. A day or two of Zentraedi healing had the senior commander looking
fit for duty; though he was again the fierce gladiator he'd always been, he was far different.
The damage done by the annihilation discs of the Invid could not be completely reversed.
The right half of Breetai's black-haired scalp and nearly half his face were covered by a gleaming
alloy prosthesis, a kind of half cowl, his right eye replaced by a glittering crystal lens.
Breetai had always been given to dark moods, but his mutilation at the hands of the enemy
had made him distant, cold and wrathful. Dolza approved.
Dolza had summoned Breetai to a spot on the perimeter of the reinforced base where Flowers
of Life were sprouting underfoot. The supreme commander quickly outlined the situation. The
details of the long struggle between Zor and the Masters, and Zor's secret plan for the future of
Protoculture, shocked Breetai, as did certain other information that was Dolza's alone to tell.
"You're my best field commander," Dolza finished. "You will lead the expedition to retake
the dimensional fortress."
The sunlight glinted off Breetai's metal skullpiece. "But-it jumped!"
Sympathy was not part of the Zentraedi emotional spectrum. Dolza therefore showed none.
"You must succeed. You must recover the fortress and its Protoculture factory before the Invid do,
or we'll have lost everything we've worked for."
Breetai's features resolved in faux lines of determination. "The dimensional fortress will
be ours, on my oath!"
CHAPTER ONE
I had misgivings like everybody else, but I thought (the appearance of SDF-1) just might be a good
thing for the human race after all when I saw how it scared hell outta the politicians.
Remark attributed to Lt. (jg) Roy Fokker in Prelude to Doomsday: A History of the Global Civil
War, by Malachi Cain
When the dimensional fortress landed in 1999 A.D., the word "miracle" had been so long overused
that it took some time for the human race to realize that a real one had indeed come to pass.
In the late twentieth century, "miracle" had become the commonplace description for home
appliances and food additives. Then came the Global Civil War, a rapid spiraling of diverse
conflicts that, by 1994, was well on its way to becoming a full-scale worldwide struggle; in the
very early days of the war, "miracle" was used by either side to represent any highly encouraging
battle news.
The World Unification Alliance came into existence because it seemed the best hope for
human survival. But its well-meaning reformers found that a hundred predators rose up to savage
them: from supranational conglomerates, religious extremists, and followers of a hundred different
ideologies to racists and bigots of every stripe.
The war bogged down, balkanized dragged on, igniting every corner of the planet. People
forgot the word "miracle." The war escalated and escalated-gradually, it's true, but everyone knew
what the final escalation would be-until hope began to die.
And in a way nobody seemed to be able to stop, the human race moved along the path to its
own utter obliteration, using weapons of its own fashioning. The life of the planet was infinitely
precious, but no one could formulate a plan to save it from the sacrificial thermonuclear fire.
Then, almost ten years into the Global Civil War, the thinking of Homo sapiens changed
forever.
The dimensional fortress's arrival was a coincidence beyond coincidence and, in the
beginning, a sobering catastrophe.
Its entry was that of a powered object, and it had appeared from nowhere, from some
unfathomable rift in the timespace continuum. Its long descent spread destruction and death as its
shock waves and the after-blast of its monumental drive leveled cities, deafened and blinded
multitudes, made a furnace of the atmosphere, and somehow awakened tectonic forces. Cities burned
and fell, and many, many died.
Its approach rattled the world. The mosques were crowded to capacity and beyond, as were
the temples and the churches. Many people committed suicide, and, curiously enough, the three most
notable high-casualty-rate categories were, in this order: fundamentalist clergy, certain elected
politicians, and major figures in the entertainment world. Speculation about their motives-that
the thing they had in common was that they felt diminished by the arrival of the alien spacecraft-
remained just that: speculation.
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At last the object slowed, obviously damaged but still capable of maneuvering. Its
astonishing speed lessened to a mere glide-except that it had little in the way of lifting
surfaces and was unthinkably heavy. It came to rest on a gently sloping plain on a small island in
the South Pacific, once the site of French atomic tests, called Macross.
The plain was long and broad, especially for such a tiny island, but it was not a great
deal longer than the ship itself. A few hundred yards behind its thrusters, waves crashed against
the beach. A short distance ahead of its ruined bow were sheer cliffs.
Its outer sheath and first layers of armor, and a great portion of the superstructure, had
been damaged in the course of its escape, or in the controlled crash of its landing. It groaned
and creaked, cooling, as the combers foamed and bashed the sand on an otherwise idyllic day on
Macross Island.
The human race began assessing the damage in a dazed, uncoordinated way. But it didn't
take long for opposing forces to convince themselves that the crash was no enemy trick.
For the first few hours, it was called "the Visitor." Leaders of the various factions of
the civil war, their presumed importance reduced by the alien vessel's appearance, took hasty
steps toward a truce of convenience. The various commanders had to move quickly and had to
sacrifice much of their prestige to accommodate one another; all eyes were turned to the sky and
to Macross Island. The Global Civil War looked like a minor, ludicrous squabble compared to the
awesome power that had just made itself felt on Earth.
Within hours, preparations were being made for an expedition to explore the wreckage.
Necessary alliances were struck, but safety factors were built into the expeditionary force.
Enemies at the top had accomplished an uneasy peace.
Now, those who'd fought the war would have to do the same.
The flight deck of the Gibraltar-class aircraft carrier Kenosha retreated beneath the
ascending helicopter, a comforting artificial island of nonskid landing surface. Lieutenant (jg)
Roy Fokker watched it unhappily, resigning himself to the mission at hand.
He turned to the man piloting the helo, Colonel T.R. Edwards, who was flying the chopper
with consummate skill. Roy Fokker was more used to those occasions when he and Edwards were doing
turns-and-burns, trying to shoot each other out of the skies.
Roy Fokker was an Internationalist, right down to his soles. His uniform bore the colors
of his carrier aviation unit, a fighter squadron: the Jolly Roger skull-and-crossbones insignia.
The colors were from the old United States Navy, the renowned and justly feared VF-84 squadron off
the USS Nimitz that had hunted the skies in F-14 Tomcats, then Z-6 Executioners, right up to Roy's
own production-line-new Z-9A Peregrine.
Roy wished he was back there in his own jet, in his own cockpit.
For so important a takeoff, it would have been normal to see the Kenosha's skipper on the
observation deck under phased-array radar antenna and other tower shrubbery-the deck the aviators
called Vulture's Row. Admiral Hayes and the other heavy-hitters were all there, but Captain Henry
Gloval wasn't. Today, Captain Henry Gloval was belted in the rear of the helo with a platoon of
marines and some techs and more scientific equipment and weapons than Roy had seen packed into a
bird before. That the Old Man should actually leave his command and go ashore showed how topsy-
turvy this spaceship or whatever it was had turned matters on Earth.
It was as oddball a mission as Roy had ever seen; it made him uncharacteristically
nervous, especially since the opposition junta had picked Edwards as its representative on the
team.
The last time Edwards and Roy had crossed contrails, Edwards had been in the hire of
something called the Northeast Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere. There was no telling who he was really
working for now, except that he was always, without exception, out to benefit Colonel T.R.
Edwards.
Roy told himself to stop thinking about it and do his job. He fidgeted in his seat a
little, uncomfortable in web gear weighted with about a hundred rounds of weapons, ammo, and
survival and exploration equipment.
He pushed his unruly mop of blond hair back out of his eyes. He wasn't sure why or when
long hairstyles had become the norm among pilots, but now it was practically de rigueur. Some
Samurai tradition?
He glanced over at Edwards. The mercenary was perhaps thirty, ten years older than Roy,
with the same lean height. Edwards had tan good-looks and sun-bleached hair and a killer smile. He
seemed to be enjoying himself.
Roy's youth didn't make him Edwards's inferior in combat experience or expertise. The
practical philosophy of the old-time Swiss and Israelis and others like them was now the rule:
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Anyone who could fly well did, and they flew as leaders if they merited it, regardless of age or
rank.
All the tea-party proprieties about a flyer needing a college education and years of
training had been thrown out as the attrition of the war made them untenable. Roy had heard that
kids as young as fourteen were in the new classes at Aerial Combat School.
Edwards had caught the glance. "Want to take over, Fokker? Be my guest."
"No thanks, Colonel. I'm just here to make sure you don't mess up and spike us into the
drink."
Edwards laughed. "Fokker, know what your problem is? You take this war stuff too
personally."
"Tell me something: D'you like flying for a bunch of fascists?"
Edwards snorted derisively. "You think there's that much difference between sides, after
ten years of war? Besides, the Neasians pay me more in a week than you make in a year."
Roy wanted to answer that, but his orders were to avoid friction with Edwards. As if to
remind him of that, a sudden aroma wafted under his nose. It was pipe tobacco, but to Roy it
always smelled like a soap factory on fire.
Gloval was at it again. But how do you tell your commanding officer that he's breaking
regs, smoking aboard an aircraft? If you are a wise young lieutenant (jg), you do not.
Roy turned back to study Macross and forgot Gloval, Edwards, and everything else. There
lay the blackened remains of a ship like nothing Earth had ever seen before.
"Great God!" Roy said slowly, and even Edwards had nothing to add.
The wreck was cool, and radiation readings were about normal. Previous fly-bys hadn't
drawn fire or seen any activity. The helo set down a few dozen yards from the scorched, broken
ruin. In another few moments the team was offloading itself and its equipment.
Gloval, a tall, rangy man with a soot-black, Stalinesque mustache, captain's hat tilted
forward on his brow, was establishing security and getting ready for preliminary external
examination of the wreckage. He was square-shouldered and vigorous, looking younger than his fifty-
odd years until one saw the lines around his eyes.
But while the preparations were going on, Lance Corporal Murphy, always itching to be on
the move, couldn't resist doing a little snooping. "Hey, lookit! I think I found a hatch!"
Gloval's voice still retained its heavy Russian accent. "You jackass! Get away from
there!"
Murphy was standing near a tall circular feature in the battered hull, waving them over.
With his back to it, he didn't see the middle of the hatch open, the halves sliding apart. He
couldn't hear his teammates' shouted warnings, as several long, segmented metal tentacles snaked
out.
In another moment, the unlucky marine was caught and lifted off his feet. The service
automatic in his hand went off, then fell from his grasp, as he was yanked within. None of the
others dared to shoot for fear of hitting him.
The hatch snapped shut. Gloval spread his arms to hold back Roy and some of the others;
they would have charged for the hatch. "Stand where you are and hold your fire! Nobody goes any
closer until we know what we're dealing with!"
An hour later things had changed, although the explorers didn't know much more than they
had at the beginning.
At Admiral Hayes's insistence, Doctor Emil Lang had been choppered ashore to supervise.
Lang was Earth's premier mind, by decree of Hayes and Senator Russo and the others in the alliance
leadership, the final authority on interplanetary etiquette.
Lang ordered everyone into anticontamination suits, then directed a human-size drone robot
to make preliminary exploration of the ship. When the robot, essentially a bulbous
detector/telemetry package on two legs, stopped dead in front of the hatch as the hatch reopened,
Lang looked thoughtful.
The robot refused to respond to further commands, the hatch stayed open, and there was no
sign of activity within. Lang's eyes narrowed behind his suit's visor as he concentrated.
Lang was a man just under medium height, slight of build, but when it came to puzzling out
the unknown, he had the courage of a lion. Disregarding his orders, he directed Gloval to select a
party to explore the wreck. Gloval picked himself, Roy, Edwards, and eight of the grunts.
"Get those spotlights on," Lang instructed. "And you may chamber a round in your weapons,
but leave the safeties on. If anyone fires without my direct order, I'll see that he's court-
martialed and hung."
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Unnoticed, T.R. Edwards made a wry face inside his suit helmet and flicked his submachine
gun selector over to full auto.
The lights they'd brought-spotlights mounted on the shoulders of their web gear-were
powerful but not powerful enough to reach the farthest limits of the compartment in which they
found themselves. Lang and Gloval only studied what was before them, but from the others were soft
exclamations, curses, obscenities.
It resembled a complex cityscape. The alien equipment and machinery was made of glassy
alloys and translucent materials, with conduitlike structures crisscrossing in midair and oddly
shaped contrivances in every direction. The spacecraft was built to a monumental scale.
Readings still indicated no danger from radiation, atmospheric, or biological
contamination; they removed the suits.
"We will divide into two groups," Gloval decided, still in charge of the tactical
decisions. "Roy, you'll take four marines. Dr. Lang, Edwards-you'll be in my group."
They were to work their way forward, following opposite sides of the wreck's inner hull,
in an attempt to link up in the bow. Failing that, they would observe as much as possible and fall
back to their original point of entry in one hour.
They started off. No one heard the inert probe robot suddenly reactivate and step through
the open hatch in their wake, moving more nimbly than it had a few minutes before.
Fifteen minutes later, in a passageway as high and wide as a stadium, Roy paused to shine
his shoulder-mounted lights around him. "This place must be playing tricks on my eyes. Does it
look to you like the walls're moving?" he asked the gunnery sergeant behind him.
The gunny said slowly, "Yeah, kinda. Like there's a fog or somethin' flowin' through all
the nooks and crannies."
Roy was about to get them moving again when he heard someone calling softly, "Caruthers.
Hey, man, where y' at?"
Caruthers was the man walking drag at the rear of the file; they all turned back to see
what was going on. Caruthers had fallen far behind for some reason; but he was rejoining them, his
spots getting nearer. But something about the man's movement wasn't normal. Moreover, his head
hung limply and he appeared to be moving considerably above them, as if on a catwalk.
They flashed their beams his way and stood rooted in astonishment and stark terror.
Caruthers's body hung on a line, like a tiny puppet, held in the hand of a humanoid metal monster
seventy feet tall.
The armored behemoth swung its free hand in their direction. They didn't have time for
permission to react; they wouldn't have listened if Lang had denied it, anyway.
Roy and the gunny and the other marines opened fire, the chatter of their submachine guns
loud in their ears.
Their tracers lit up the darkness, as the bullets bounced off the monster's armor as if
they were paper clips.
Its right hand loosed a stream of reddish-orange fury. A marine disappeared like a zapped
bug, turned to ash in an instant.
CHAPTER TWO
I suppose, in the back of my mind, I was aware that fate had sent my way a chance to be mentioned
in the same breath with Einstein, Newton, and the rest. But to tell the truth, I thought little of
that. Before the lure of so much new knowledge, any scientist would've made poor old Faust look
like a saint.
Dr. Emil Lang, Technical Recordings and Notes
Roy and the others emptied their weapons to no avail. The looming weapon hand swung to a new
target as they ducked, switching their turned-and-taped double magazines around to lock and load a
fresh one.
A second stream of superheated brilliance blazed, and another marine was incinerated.
Roy realized the radio was useless; it was in Hersch's rucksack, and he'd just been fried.
Roy turned, spotted the RPG rocket launcher dropped by the first victim, and made a dive for it.
The gunnery sergeant gave him a look of misgiving but kept his peace. Firing the weapon
might be suicidal for a number of reasons, including secondary explosions from their attacker, but
Roy saw no other options; their escape was cut off, and there was no cover worthy of the name.
The RPG was already loaded. Roy peered through the sights, centering the reticle, and
fired at the thing's midsection, where two segments met. The resulting explosion split the metal
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monster in half; it toppled, venting raging energy. The secondary blast knocked Roy off his feet.
He lost consciousness for a second but came to, momentarily deafened, with the gunny
shaking him. Roy managed to read his lips: "It's still alive!"
Blearily Roy followed the pointing finger. It was true: Segments of the shattered behemoth
were rocking and jouncing; those that had some articulation were trying to drag themselves toward
the intruders. Other pieces were firing occasional beams, most of which splashed off the faraway
ceiling.
The gunny got Roy to his feet and began dragging him around the remains in what seemed
like the direction from which they'd come. Even though he couldn't hear, Roy could feel heavy
vibrations in the deck. He turned and found a second monster approaching. He couldn't figure out
how the first one had come upon them so silently, and he didn't wait around to find out.
The thing halted by the smoldering debris of the first as Roy staggered off behind the
gunny.
"... remember coming through here," Roy dimly heard the gunny say when they paused after
what seemed like a year of tottering along the deck. Evidently, the gunny had covered his ears to
avoid the rocket's impact; he was listening as well as looking for more enemies.
"Neither do I," Roy said wearily. "But all our other routes were blocked."
"They could've polished us all off, Lieutenant," the gunny said.
Roy shook his head, just as confused as the marine. "Maybe they're herding us along
somewhere; I dunno."
They took up their way again. Roy's hearing was coming back, accompanied by a painful
ringing. "Maybe they don't want to kill all of us because-"
The gunny screamed a curse. Roy looked down to see that the deck plates were rippling
around their legs like a running stream, engulfing them.
Gloval gripped his automatic resolutely. "Are you getting all this on the video, Dr. Lang?"
Lang put his palm to his forehead. "Yes, but those shapes keep shifting... gets me dizzy
just looking..."
"Kinda like... vertigo..." T.R. Edwards added.
Gloval was feeling a little queasy himself. He called a halt for a breather, sending
Edwards to peer into the next compartment. Gloval watched Lang worriedly; with the arrival of the
alien ship, Lang became the most indispensable man on the planet. Lang must be kept safe at all
costs, and the fact that Gloval couldn't raise Roy's party or the outside world on the radio had
the captain skittish.
Edwards was back in moments, face as white as his teeth. "You'd better brace yourselves."
Edwards swallowed with difficulty. "I found Murphy, but-it's a little hard to take." He swallowed
again to keep from vomiting.
One by one they went to join him at the entrance to the next compartment, from which an
intense fight shone. Lang caught the edge of the hatch to steady himself when he saw what was
there.
In a large translucent tank wired with various life support systems floated the various
pieces of Lance Corporal Murphy in a tiny sea of sluggish nutrient fluid.
They drifted lazily, here an arm, there the head-sightless eyes wide open-a severed hand
bumping gently against the stripped torso. The fluid was filled with fine strands glowing in
incandescent greens. Tiny amoebalike globules flocked to the body parts and away from them again,
feeding and providing oxygen and removing wastes.
Gloval turned to the marine behind him. "Establish security! Whoever did this may still be
around." The men shook off their paralysis and rushed to obey.
All, that is, but one, who was about to pluck out a leg by a white, wrinkled foot that had
bobbed to the surface. "We can't leave 'im like this!" Through the grinding war, the marines had
maintained their honor and their high traditions proudly; esprit de corps was like the air they
breathed. To leave one of their own on the battlefield was to leave a part of themselves.
But Lang pulled the grunt back with surprising strength. "Don't touch him! Who knows what
the solution is? You want to end up pickled in there too? No? Good! Then just draw a specimen with
this device and be careful!"
Gloval, carefully gauging the alien topography to keep his mind-and eyes-off Murphy's
parts, determined that his suspicions were true: The internal layout of the place was changing
around them. There was no way back.
He quickly formed up his little command and got them moving, grimly satisfied that Edwards
wasn't so cocky anymore.
Moments later, as the party moved through a darkened area, he felt a marine tug at his
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shoulder. "Cap'n! There's a-"
And all hell broke loose as armored behemoths set upon Gloval's group from the rear,
blasting and trying to stamp the puny humans into the deck.
One marine gave the beginning of a shriek and then blew into fragments, the moisture in
his tissues instantaneously converted to steam, the scraps of flesh vaporized in the alien's beam.
The humans cut loose with all weapons, including a man-portable recoilless rifle and a
light machine gun whose drum magazine was loaded with Teflon semi-armorpiercers. A second marine
was cremated almost instantly.
They had better luck than Roy's team in that the machine gunner and the RR man both
happened to aim for the lead monster's firing hand and were lucky enough to find a vulnerable
point, blowing it off.
The fortress's guardian staggered and shook as the fire set off secondary explosions.
"Gloval! In here!" screamed Edwards, standing at the human-size hatch to a side compartment. The
survivors dashed to it, crowding in, two of the marines hauling Lang between them while the doctor
continued recording the scene as the injured machine-thing shot flame and smoke and flying
shrapnel through the air.
"We can hold 'em off from here-for now," Edwards said, throwing aside a spent pair of
magazines and inserting a fresh one in his Ingrain MAC-35.
"Concentrate fire on anything that approaches that door," Gloval told the marines, and
turned to survey the rest of the compartment. It was quite tiny by the standards of the wreck:
Perhaps eight paces on a side, with no other exit.
Lang was shaken but in control, willing his hands to be steady as he took what videos he
could of the scene in the outer compartment. Gloval was about to command him to get back out of
the line of fire when the floor began to move.
"Hey! Who pushed the up button?" Edwards shouted, pale again.
"Security wheel!" Gloval bellowed. "Doctor Lang in the center!"
Lang was thrust into the middle of the rising elevator platform as the others put their
backs against him, weapons pointed out before them. The ceiling was about to crush them, but
suddenly it rippled like water, letting them pass through. They came up into a brighter place and
heard a familiar voice.
"Well, well. 'Bout time you guys got here."
"Roy!" The lieutenant stood leaning against a stanchion in the most immense chamber they'd
seen yet, lit as bright as day.
When stories were exchanged, Gloval said, "All right, then, we've been herded here. But
why?"
Lang pointed to a bridgelike structure enclosed by a transparent bowl, high to the stern
end of the compartment. It was big but seemingly built to human scale.
"I'm betting that is the ship's nerve center, skipper, and that is the captain's station."
"It's our best shot, so we shall try it," Gloval decided, "but you stay with the main
body, my good doctor, and let Roy go first."
"What an honor." Edwards grinned at Roy.
Zor's quarters were as he had left them, so long ago and far away. The sleep module, the
work station, and the rest were built to human scale and function. Lang stared around himself as
if in a dream.
Despite the many objects and installations that were impossible to identify, there was a
certain comprehensibility to the place: here, a desk unit, there, a screen of some kind.
Roy, Gloval, and the others were so fascinated that they didn't notice what Lang was doing
until they heard the pop and crisp of static.
"Lang, you fool! Get away from there!"
But before Gloval could tear him away from the console, Lang had somehow discovered how to
activate it. Waves of distortion chased each other across the screen, then a face appeared among
the wavering lines.
Gloval's grip on Lang's jacket became limp. "Good God... it's human!"
"Not quite, perhaps, but close, I would say," Lang conceded calmly.
Zor's face stared out of the screen. The wide, almond eyes seemed to look at each man in
the compartment, and the mouth spoke in a melodious, chiming language unlike anything the humans
had ever heard before.
"It's a `greetings' recording," Lang said matter-of-factly.
"Like those plates and records on the old Voyagers," Roy murmured.
The alien's voice took on a different tone, and another image flashed on the screen. The
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humans found themselves looking at an Invid shock trooper in action, firing and rending.
"Some kind of war machine. Nasty," Lang interpreted.
As the others watched the image, Roy touched Gloval's shoulder and said, "Captain, I think
we'd better get out of here."
"But how? This blasted ship keeps rearranging itself."
"Look!" cried Edwards, pointing. The deck rippled as a newcomer rose up through it. All
weapons came to bear on it except Lang's; the doctor was dividing his attention between what was
going on and the continuing message on the screen.
A familiar form stood before them. "It's the drone robot, the one that broke down," the
gunny said.
Edwards's eyes narrowed. "Yeah, but how could it have followed us?"
"It appears to be functioning again," Gloval said. "Maybe we can use it to contact the
base."
Lang crossed to the robot, which waited patiently. He opened a rear access cowling and
went to inspect the internal parts there, then snatched his hands back as if he'd been bitten.
They all crowded around warily, ready to blast the machine to bits. "This isn't the
original circuitry," Lang said, sounding interested but not frightened. "The components are
reshaping themselves."
As they stared, wires writhed and microchips changed like a miniaturized urban renewal
project seen from above by time-lapse photography. Things slid, folded, altered shape and
position. It reminded Roy of an unlikely cross between a blossoming flower and those kids' games
where the player slides alphanumeric tiles around into new sequences.
"Perhaps it's been sent here to lead us out," Gloval suggested.
"But why'd the other gizmos attack?" Edwards objected.
Lang shrugged. "Who knows what damage the systems have suffered? Perhaps the attacks are a
result of a malfunction. Certainly, the message we just saw was intended as a warning, which
implies good intentions."
"But what's it all mean, Doc?" Roy burst out.
Lang looked to him. "It means Earth may be in for more visitors, I think. Lots more."
"All right, all of you: Get ready," Gloval said. "If we can get the drone to lead us,
we'll take a chance on it. We've no alternative."
While the others readied themselves, dividing up the remaining ammunition, reloading the
last two rocket launchers, and listening to Gloval direct their order of march, Lang went back to
the screen console.
He had been right; this was the ship's nerve center, and the console and its peripherals
were the nucleus of it all. Lang began form-function analysis, fearing that he would never get
another chance to study it.
Certainly, the ship used no source of power that he could conceive of. Some uncanny alien
force coursed through the fallen ship and through the console. Perhaps if he could get some data
on it or get access to it...
At Lang's cry they all turned with guns raised, as strobing light threw their shadows tall
against the bulkheads. The command center flashed and flowed with power like an unearthly network
of electronic blood vessels.
The console was surrounded by a blinding aurora of harsh radiance that pulsed through the
spectrum. Lang, body convulsed in agony, holding fast to the console, shone with those same colors
as the enigmatic forces flooding into him.
"Don't touch him-!" Gloval barked at Roy, who'd been about to attempt a body check to
knock Lang clear. Edwards moved to one side, well out of range of the discharges, to get a line of
fire on the console that wouldn't risk hitting Lang. Edwards made sure his selector was on full
auto and prepared to empty the magazine into the console.
But before he could, the alien lightning died away. Lang slumped slowly to the deck.
"Captain, the robby's leaving!" The gunny pointed to where the deck was starting to ripple
around the drone's feet.
There was no time for caution. Roy slung Lang over his shoulder, hoping the man wasn't
radioactive or something else contagious. In another moment they were all ranged around the robot,
sinking through the floor.
Air and matter and space seemed to shift around them. Lang was stirring on Roy's shoulder,
and Roy was getting a better grip on him, distracted, when one of the marines hollered, "Tell me
I'm not seein' this!"
The ship had changed again, or they were in a different place. And they were gazing at the
remains of a giant.
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file:///F|/rah/Jack%20McKinney/McKinney,%20Jack%20-%20Robotech%2001%20-%\20Genesis.txtRobotech:GenesisBookOneoftheRobotechseriesCopyright1987byJackMcKinneyPROLOGUEI'vebroughtdeathandsufferinginsuchmagnitude,Zorthought.It'son\lyrightthatIspentthebalanceofmylifebringinglife.Helookedoutfromtheobservati...

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