MIDNIGHT IN THE HEART
OF MIDLOTHIAN
FRANK O‘CONNOR
ONE
___________
― It’s just cancer. "
―What do you mean, it‘s just cancer?"
―I mean, it‘s just cancer. A very simple cancer that hasn‘t spread or metastasized and is eminently operable."
―I don‘t mean to sound rude, Doctor—"
―I‘m not a doctor, I‘m a medical technician—"
―Whatever. What I‘m saying is that I don‘t know what cancer is."
―Oh. I got you. Cancer‘s a kind of um . . . slow-burn, localized infection, kind of. But we haven‘t really seen a lot of it since . . . hmm, twenty-second century, according to this. Anyway, it‘s easy to treat, but you‘re going to have to have surgery."
―What for? I thought you said it‘s an infection. Can‘t you just irradiate or drug it?"
―Yes, and we‘re going to do both of those. But to be sure we get all of it, and don‘t have you back here next month, we may have to remove some tissue."
―What kind of tissue?"
―Nothing you need for a date. Don‘t sweat it."
What a bastard arse of a morning, he thought to himself. I wake up with a stomachache and end up in the medical bay with an archaic disease that was wiped out by simple gene therapy four hundred years ago. At least, according to Shipnet. There were more than fourteen terabytes of data on
―Cancer," which was apparently damn-near ubiquitous in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
His morning was about to get much worse.
The ship he was in was heading into a grim unknown. The planet Algolis had been attacked by a small but potent Covenant force. Details were thin, since the only witnesses were civilians. Civilians who‘d barely made it off that world. Civilians who‘d been kept deliberately in the dark about the Prototype weapons systems on that planet and had escaped by the skin of their teeth, and by the sacrifice of a brave few Marines from the Corps of Engineers.
It was a mess. And they were hurtling into it through the quantum foam and spatial uncertainty of a rushed slipspace jump. The plan was to stop short of the system itself and come in under the cover of a gas giant and a faked asteroidal trajectory—an old strategy, but one that worked well enough.
Find out what had happened on Algolis and make sure the weapons prototypes were completely
eradicated. Then loop back on a complex and slow Cole Protocol return trip.
The last mission had been complicated by a Marine sergeant going MIA. Guy the other Corps of Engineers salts called ―Ghost." He supposed they were all ghosts now. Or ONI was hiding
something.
A mess.
―Mo Ye, how come I have cancer?"
Mo Ye, the shipboard AI of the UNSC Destroyer The Heart of Midlothian , thought for a picosecond before answering through the medbay‘s directional audio feed. ―Nothing in your
civilian, Marine, or ODST record to suggests any particular genetic preponderance. But it happens from time to time. Perhaps you‘re just a throwback, Baird. It would explain that Cro-Magnon brow of yours."
Mo Ye‘s avatar, a small, angry, and elderly looking Chinese lady in peasant‘s garb, flashed a rare smile as she said it and cackled through a crackling (and perfectly synthesized) smoker‘s cough to punctuate her joke. Her eyes sparkled with the wicked humor of the viciously old and crotchety. The projector plinth on which she stood pulsed a pleasant pink hue.
Orbital Drop Shock Trooper Sergeant Mike Baird snorted back a laugh. Mo Ye was well known for her bone-dry sense of humor, but he smiled as he thought of his high school nickname: Captain Caveman.
He really did have a heavy brow; a thick ridge that capped an otherwise unremarkable, if sturdy face. A prominent rounded jawline and sharply defined cheeks helped elevate him lightly into the realm of Homo sapiens, but a low-slung, muscular build, a close-cropped dusting of silver-black hair, and cloudy, amber eyes did little to dispel the visual notion of a rock-banging troglodyte.
―Don‘t worry about the surgery, Baird. It really is trivial. The autosurgeon will be done in less than an hour. But you‘ll be under for significantly longer than that. It‘s a straightforward but invasive procedure. I‘ll be observing and can retain a vid for you if you want to see the procedure after you wake up."
Mo Ye spoke in an almost gentle tone, her version of a bedside manner, Baird supposed.
―No thanks," he said. ―I‘ll be seeing plenty of blood and guts where we‘re going."
―Let‘s hope not," replied Mo Ye. ―Intelligence is rough, but we‘re not expecting trouble, just a lot of rubble."
―When will I be back on duty?" he asked. Baird was starting to worry that this surgery would keep him shipboard. He didn‘t want to miss the ride when he and his squad were dropped in hot on Algolis‘s night side. Quiet or not, he loved the thrill of the drop and the subsequent sweep. He wanted action.
―Two days, by rule," she said, ―but you‘ll be happy and ambulatory in the morning. Now go to sleep."
Baird heard the pop-hiss of a pneumatic syringe and the gentle beep of his vitals as he lay in the padded autosurgeon cot, even as the narcotic slowed his pulse. He never felt the injection itself. The soft yellow glow of the medbay became a warm, reassuring sepia.
The red-haired medical technician who‘d given him the bad news earlier smiled through the
yellowing haze and he was lulled by the slowing beat of his own heart. And then there was nothing.
The Heart of Midlothian scythed through slipspace with the silent precision of a scalpel.
TWO
___________
―Wake up."
In his dream, the voice was of his mother in Scotland, telling him it was time to get up and go to school. It was freezing outside, he knew. A biting, bludgeoning cold that punished schoolchildren before they ever made it to class. An unforgiving, frigid wind that roared in from the gray North Sea and turned little hands into useless pink mittens, unable to type or scratch on datadesks until furious rubbing and cosseting heaters warmed the blood again.
He didn‘t want to go to school. He wanted to stay here, wrapped up in these soft blankets.
―Wake up." Insistent now. But hissed. Not his mother. Not Maud Baird‘s pleasant singsong brogue.
Nope, this was thick Mandarin-accented En glish.
The sepia glow had gone. The medbay was in near darkness, punctuated by the soft red pulse of the emergency floor lights. A dream. But goddamn if that cold wasn‘t real.
―What the f—"
―Ssssh." The hissed demand seemed to drill into Baird‘s ear. He realized it was Mo Ye, using the directional acoustics of the medbay—ostensibly for patient privacy. But he knew, even through the groggy haze of narcotics and sleep, that something was wrong. The lights, for one thing, without even the pink glow of her avatar to show which plinth she stood on.
―What‘s happening?" Now he whispered.
―I‘ll tell you as you move, but right now if you don‘t put on some clothes and do as I say you will be dead in a couple of minutes." Mo Ye was using a tone he‘d never heard before. He started moving.
In less than a minute, he was up, dressed, and fastening his boots. The confusion and torpor of the drugs were still softening the edges of everything . This still didn‘t feel real. Mo Ye began to brief him. The news wasn‘t good. But it certainly was real .