DIRT
TOBIAS S. BUCKELL
THE FIGUREin the charcoal-black body armor picked his way over the top of a shattered, stubby wing, then walked past the ruined mangle of a Pelican dropship. A large BR55 battle rifle rested at the ready, cradled between his forearms.
He paused by the tip of the Pelican, which had plowed into the ground on its side, and looked through the shattered windows of the cockpit.
―Over here, Marine."
The oval black helmet swung around to look at a clump of tall orange grass behind a thick piece of granite, the morning sun glinting off the upside-down T-shaped visor.
BR55 aimed forward; the Orbital Drop Shock Trooper moved toward the sound of the voice and
pushed aside the tall fronds of grass.
The 70-millimeter chain gun from the tip of the Pelican dropship had broken loose and sheared the tip of granite clean off, then cratered into the dirt a few hundred feet away.
Lying between it and the rock was a man in battle dress uniform: simple camouflage with a few chest and hip pockets. Fairly standard.
He‘d obviously been thrown clear of the cockpit on impact and bounced along the dirt. Both legs looked broken, and at least one arm. Blood seeped through the BDU‘s legs, torso, and arms.
The man‘s face was cut up. Enough to be unrecognizable.
He had an M6 Magnum sidearm pointed at the ODST, which he let drop to the dirt next to him in exhaustion.
Somehow the soldier had crawled out of his body armor, which lay all around him. A closer look revealed why: charred and melted, the ODST body armor would have burned his skin.
―Good to see you." The man‘s voice held the strange calm of someone who knew they were
beyond help, so terribly injured they were past the pain. ―I wasn‘t sure if the call got through."
The ODST crouched beside him and opened a medical pack. Biofoam, to stop the worst of the
bleeding, and polypsuedomorphine to ease the man‘s pain. He worked as best he could, though his hands shook a bit. This wasn‘t training; this was a real, dying man, and the ODST was no medic. He looked around. ―My SOEIV landed nearby, and I was ordered over to see if I could help with a downed Pelican. But sir, you need more help than I can give you. We need to get you out of here.
There are Covenant forces moving in on our position. We don‘t have much time."
―We have time, Private." The injured Marine grabbed the helmet of the crouched shoulder in a sudden movement, yanking the man down close to him.
―I‘ve been doing this so long, rook, that somewhere along the line I forgot what it was all about,"
the Marine on the ground hissed into the reflective visor. ―But what I want you to remember about me is that it has been a long journey between where I started and where I‘m sitting now. I would apologize for the things I‘ve done, but sorry‘s passed me by, rook. You don‘t see the things I‘ve seen and come out sorry. But sometimes, if you‘re not a complete monster, you come out realizing what‘s important."
The ODST pushed back carefully, trying to make sure not to further hurt the man on the ground.
―Sir?"
He coughed, blood staining his lips and chin. ―All this crap started back in the Colonial Military."
The ODST turned and looked back the way he‘d come, helmet twisting, and murmured a situation report and request for backup as he reported his find.
―Of course," the injured man continued, ―I can see by your insignia you‘re a private, just out of training, probably your first jump down to dirtside. You might not even remember the CMA . . . but back before there was the UNSC, there was the CMA . . ."
―Sir . . ."
―Shut up and listen, rookie! There‘s something important I have to tell you." The man‘s face relaxed. He was slipping back into a world of thoughts and memories. ―About friends. Betrayal.
Loss. If you keep your head up and do what I tell you, you might even live long enough to tell someone what happened here . . ."
I SIGNEDup for the Colonial Military the hour I turned eighteen. January 3, 2524. Smartest thing I‘d done up to that point. Flipped off my father, who‘d stood by a giant JOTUN trundling across a flat, golden plain of wheat, and then I rode a flatbed full of corn all the way into town. Sure, the JOTUNs did the real manual labor: plowing, planting, monitoring, harvesting. But we still ended up among the crops now and again, despite the automated work the giant, one hundred-foot lawn
mower-like machines did.
―It‘s just dirt," I‘d told a friend about my decision to leave. ―And I‘m sick and tired of grubbing about in it. I can‘t believe my parents left a real world to travel all the way out here to dig dirt."
The farming life was not my destiny. I‘d known that since the day I first looked up at the stars while riding on the back of one of the giant, automated JOTUNs, a long piece of straw dangling out the side of my mouth.
No. I was going to see worlds. Pack a gun. The next time I came back home to Harvest, I wanted to watch the girls bat their eyes at a man in uniform. Not a farm boy with dirt under his nails. I wanted to be a hard-as-nails tough-ass Marine.
I walked around Utgard for the last time, strolling along the banks of the Mimir River. I lit up a Sweet William cigar by the floodlit, well-landscaped grounds of the Colonial Parliament‘s long walls. I blew what cash I had on me on drink after drink at bars scattered all up and down the Mimir until I could barely walk.
Then at sunrise, without a wink of sleep, I walked into a small recruiting office where a vaguely bored-looking desk sergeant looked me over and handed me some paperwork. After I painfully
worked my way through it, he stood up and shook my hand. ―Welcome to the Colonial Military, son," he said.
By that evening I was still not a tough-ass Marine, but a tired, hungover recruit without any hair, dressed in an ill-fitting uniform, throwing up my guts in a dirt field while a drill sergeant yelled at me. I was now Private First Class Gage Yevgenny.
I want to say I learned how to kill a man with my pinky, or how to use a sniper rifle to kill a fly on a log of shit from a thousand yards, but all I really learned was that I didn‘t like scrabbling around in the mud with live rounds going off over my head.
But I made it through anyway.
Unlike the UNSC, the CMA boot camp lasted just a couple weeks. Enough to teach you how to use your weapon, salute, march, and drive a Warthog before they booted you right on out of there.
It wasn‘t that much more advanced than spending a week shooting gophers in the fields, or so I thought at the time.
Unlike some of my fellow recruits, I at least knew how to point and shoot. As a result, I was promoted to lance corporal and got to tell a few other soldiers what to do.
That I liked.
But it still didn‘t prepare me for the things I was about to see.
I METFelicia Sanderson and Eric Santiago at the Utgard spaceport. Felicia grew up right here in Utgard, on Harvest; Eric had come in from Madrigal. With our duffels at our feet, we waited as patiently as we could in line with civilian passengers. We‘d developed some grudging respect for one another during boot camp, enough that they felt comfortable airing complaints about Colonial Military life around me.
―I still can‘t believe we‘re forced to fly civilian to Eridanus," Felicia groused.
―We could go AWOL," Eric said.
I shook my head. ―Where? The liner doesn‘t stop anywhere remotely interesting between here and the Eridanus System."
―I‘m just saying, it‘s odd." Eric picked his duffel up as the line moved.
―How could command let the UNSC grab all our ships?" Felicia had been complaining about this latest development for a solid week. Harvest was a newer colony, and most of the settlers had come from other Outer Colonies. Felicia and her family didn‘t hold a lot of love for the UNSC, or the Earth-controlled Colonial Administration. Her family hadn‘t set foot on Earth in generations.
It was, I had to admit, an indignity. Without our own ships, the Colonial Military was shuttling fighting men where it needed them by buying them coach-class tickets.
The three of us had been deployed to Eridanus, where the action was. Our angry words for the UNSC were partly attempts to hide our nervousness. Talking big to keep our minds off the big issue.
Operation TREBUCHET had been the UNSC‘s answer to Insurrectionists, and we‘d just been
folded into the far-ranging series of operations aimed to ―pacify" the Outer Colonies.
I was just excited to be leaving Harvest for the first time, no matter how, or to where.
As we lifted off, I could see one of the seven space elevators that Harvest used to move its goods off the planet‘s surface. Just like me, each piece of cargo would be flying through slip-space to other planets, like seeds being dispersed from a pod.
It was the last time I saw Harvest with my own eyes.