Parangosky said it in that careful y flat tone she adopted when she was aware of the reaction it would get. It was al rather final. Anyone could believe a legend was missing in action, but when his name was carved into a memorial to the fal en, the il usion was over. Osman considered herself immune to that sort of thing. But confirmation that the Master Chief was actual y gone took the shine off the day.
She tried to remember him as John, as a ferocious, scared, endlessly resourceful colonial kid like herself, but she couldn’t even recal his face.
“But what about the MIA status? Are we announcing that Spartans die now?”
“No, but the public realizes that MIA is just a service courtesy. I think even I have to accept he’s dead, Captain. It’s been two months now.”
Osman wondered how to rephrase the good news she’d been rehearsing mental y. She decided to plunge in and risk sounding crass.
Parangosky knew her too wel to misunderstand her.
“I thought he’d survive us al ,” she said, taking a breath. “It’s hard to say happy birthday after that, ma’am, but I do have something for you. How would you like a pet Huragok? His name’s Requires Adjustment, but we cal him Adj.”
Parangosky looked blank for a moment, and then started to smile. The smile spread for quite some time, sad and genuine.
“How thoughtful, Captain. In fact, it’s just what I needed. Thank you.”
“He’s upgrading everything in sight at the moment, but we’l get him to you as soon as we can.”
“That might prove to be even more important than your current mission. Wel done, Serin. Seriously. Wel done.” She rarely used Osman’s first name. “Would you like a little gift in return?”
“We’ve got the good Jamaican coffee, ma’am. It’s very much appreciated.”
“Better than that.”
Osman basked in the brief respite of a smal success that might turn the tide for good. She thought of John and reminded herself that she might be dead tomorrow too, along with everyone she cared about. “I could do with cheering up, Admiral.”
“We final y found the hole where Halsey bolted,” Parangosky said. “Now al we have to do is work out how to kick down the door.”
CHAPTER ELEVEN
I’M GLAD THAT CAPTAIN OSMAN IS SATISFIED WITH THE TEAM WE RECOMMENDED. IT TOOK SOME EFFORT TO SELECT QUALIFIED PERSONNEL WHO HAD BOTH NO FAMILY TIES AND WHO WOULD ALSO BOND WELL WITH ONE ANOTHER. SPARTAN-010 DIDN’T QUITE FIT THOSE CRITERIA, BUT WITH SO FEW SPARTANS LEFT, SOME FLEXIBILITY WAS NEEDED.
(DR. MIRIAM BAXENDALE, HEAD OF OCCUPATIONAL PERSONALITY TESTING, UNSC HR, TO ADMIRAL MARGARET O.
PARANGOSKY, CINCONI)
BEKAN KEEP, MDAMA, SANGHELIOS: FEBRUARY 2553 BY THE HUMAN CALENDAR.
‘Telcam was late.
Jul paced up and down the quarry, fidgeting with the arum while he waited for whatever shuttle the monk was flying today. ‘Telcam changed transports on each trip to avoid attention, he said. The only flaw in that strategy was Unflinching Resolve, huge and unconcealable as only a frigate could be.
The ship sat in the disused quarry like a rebuke to Jul’s common sense. Her magazine was steadily fil ing up with arms and ordnance, one cargo drop at a time, gleaned from hardware scattered around Sanghelios and the nearby colonies. Just as the smal transports had found their way back to the keeps, nobody was keeping tabs on any other equipment either, and in the absence of the San’Shyuum, their organizational skil s, and a war to fight, it was simply being taken by shipmasters and stored in the keeps.
How many shots does it take to kill one Arbiter?
‘Telcam kept tel ing Jul that overthrowing a charismatic leader like Thel ‘Vadam would take more than kil ing him. The ideas around him—his loyal entourage—had to be rooted out too, or else the very death became a new Arbiter in itself, a martyrdom, the creation of a legend after death.
And you couldn’t assassinate a ghost.
The sound of a Kig-Yar shuttle made him spin around. So that was ‘Telcam’s transport today. Jul, like most warriors, knew almost every vessel by the sound of its engine or drive long before he saw it. It was a matter of prudence. He would never admit that was his motive, of course, because a warrior was supposed to prize a glorious death before a timely extraction, but it was hard to be a successful warrior when you were dead. Jul didn’t regard a tactical withdrawal as cowardice.
The shuttle—yes, Kig-Yar, just as he thought—final y came into view and dropped down into the quarry. He waited for its drives to shut down and approached it. ‘Telcam climbed down from the cockpit and looked around.
“Where’s Manus?” he asked. That was one of Buran’s loyal Jiralhanae. “He should have been here by now. We lost contact with him last night.”
Jiralhanae weren’t known for their timekeeping. “Yours is the first shuttle to land for two days,” Jul said. “You know what they’re like. He probably became embroiled in some fistfight over philosophical matters and it’s delayed him.”
“No, Buran assured me he was reliable. He had a very important cargo, and I don’t just mean weapons. He had a Huragok they recovered from Serene Certainty. ”
Had they been discussing Kig-Yar, Jul would have assumed that the shipment had been diverted and sold by now. But Jiralhanae weren’t interested in profits. Everything stemmed from their unfathomable pack politics. The feud between Jiralhanae and Sangheili had final y erupted again with the Great Schism, but Jul had never quite worked out where the fault lines were. Jiralhanae fought each other, they fought the Sangheili, and, for no reason Jul could truly understand, some of them remained loyal to Sanghelios.
“Give him a little longer,” Jul said. “Now let’s transfer the cargo before we attract an audience.”
“Something’s wrong. I know it.”
“Brother, if the vessel had crashed, we would have heard by now.”
“Would we? What’s happened to our communications? Our monitoring? No, we would not know. That yawning gap is also what enables us to stand a chance of succeeding, but sometimes it conspires against us.”
Jul had formed the opinion that ‘Telcam was blessed with the calm certainty of the faithful, so seeing him agitated was unsettling. But Jul understood the importance of acquiring a Huragok or two. The Covenant had run on them, invisible and reliable, repairing everything from machines and buildings to living bodies, and constructing every piece of technology a modern empire needed. He’d grown so used to their presence that he’d ceased to notice them. Now his wife and brothers were forced to learn construction skil s, and he was starting to see al the things, large and smal , that were starting to fal apart because the Huragok had fled.
There were so many. Where did they all go?
He was certain that the Great Schism hadn’t kil ed al the San’Shyuum. That wasn’t possible. As he unloaded the shuttle with ‘Telcam, he wondered where the survivors had gone. They had almost certainly taken most of the Huragok with them, and that meant they might be regrouping to return one day and take back their old empire.
The idea was so appal ing that he stopped in his tracks. What was he doing worrying about the humans? They were no more than an infestation, backward vermin, and could be eradicated. The San’Shyuum, though, would be another matter.