9. CRUSH DEPTH APPREHENSION

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Briefing now seemed as distant as the year before. Yet, he clearly remembered how this amount of people to back up such as a small and secret operation looked far excessive. He hadn't complained, of course, as orders were orders; and he was now thankful for his military rigorousness as he looked at the dozens of helicopters that were now flooding the sky in the far distance, truly hoping they would prove to be enough. Luckily, phase two reinforcements hadn't run into any more troubles after phase one cleared theirs.

"Exact headcount?" he asked the radio lieutenant who re-checked the incoming transmissions log.

"Phase one is sixty soldiers, six AH64Ds and ten F-16s, phase two is one hundred fifty soldiers plus five M1A2s, ten AH64Ds, ten APCs and several medium-range artillery systems, sir!"

"F-16s, bomber configuration I take? And what about the F22?"

"Correct about the F-16s, sir, as for the F22 it has been grounded due to technical problems. It's part of what delayed the reinforcements, and they're trying to see if something else can be sent instead."

Even without the prototype, that remained enough people to start a full-scale invasion of a small nation. They were the very best their nation and a few others had to give, plus a lot more people just slightly below that title - if he ever had any doubts about the importance of this operation, after having been offered a prototype for a mission - the most difficult thing to obtain, even more than nuclear weapons - they would now be gone. He did smell that he was being hidden something when the higher brass spoke of this crazy amount of reinforcements so easily and often, as if they expected them to be called with total certainty. Hard suspects now turned to facts: he was sure that the fate of the entire planet was hanging in the balance.

"Group designations confirmed?"

"Yessir! The AH64 group is Firebird, F-16 group is Eagle and M1A2 group is Creature. Entire regiment designation is Chaos Control."

They were even appropriate and easy to remember: that fact alone told almost as much as their numbers did.
The radio man turned back at the radio as a message was received:
*This is Firebird One to SO leader, the sky is hot, I repeat, the sky is hot! We are tracking unknown vessels and have lost contact with Firebird Six, over!*

The scanning equipment were right then, the enemy had aircrafts! The General glanced at the sky, and yes, there were blotches in the opposite direction as the one reinforcements were coming through. Just as if they hadn't enough problems...

"This is SO Leader to Firebird One, further instructions are coming, over and out." It was time for the briefing.

"Lieutenant, open full comm channel to Chaos Control."

The man moved to a particular frequency, chatted a second on the radio, and then handed the mike to the General.

"This is SO leader, Chaos Control. I know most of you have been put on the ready three days ago and still have no idea of what's going on. I'm afraid I'll have to be very brief. We have alien contact, repeat, alien contact and the threat is expanding by the minute. If we don't stop them we won't have an home to return, soldiers, so you'd better have given up on your life when you were told to! Firebird and Eagle groups will split and clear the sky. The ground troops will divide and zero in their updated LZs, data transmission is imminent. Let nothing stand in your way! SO Leader, over and out."

With that, he returned the mike to the radio man, who began to send over the updated version of the Black Mesa LZ points that were decided at briefing, while once again hoping for the strike force to be enough.

*

"Let's drill right through it!" shouted Gordon, but Gina had already started the rotor engine and slammed full speed forwards. The already high noise quickly turned unbearable as the drill geared to full speed and made contact with the beast's reinforced hull with a very high pitch.

"Shit! Gordon, pull the ejection lever!"

But Gordon remained frozen, out of time, unable to do as much as wink. The bulky HEV, only barely slowed by the impact, continued its mad dash through the tunnel; tunnel which soon ended into a wall. Gina shouted, but the noise was too high and no one dared to unfasten the seatbelts with all that was going on.

There was an imperceptible raise in the sound as the wall was crashed through, and the room beyond revealed its content: one of the redundant generators, now operational through their actions, towards which they were heading. Gina decided to challenge her luck by unbuckling. She was immediately bumped off the driver's seat, but managed to remain on the floor long enough to grab the lever beside the still-frozen Gordon and push it up. The entire canopy was ejected to the vehicle's right, landed into a water pool, finally breaking open as the occupants were literally shot upwards. A short swim to a platform only slightly above water level, and they witnessed the aftermath of the HEV's crashing into the generator itself: an instant after they turned around, thousand of gigavolts enveloped the creature and what remained of the HEV's hull, the former emitting no sound as the thunderbolts quickly found the minuscule opening the drill was able to make and devastated whatever was within.

Then, the creature's chest exploded.

The three expected a repulsive show that would be forever stuck in the back of their minds, but the shower of electric components hit them even more; their use and looks were unknown at this distance and at their expertise, but each one danced wildly for a few seconds until the energy in them dissipated and they lied down, motionlessly. Finally, the ringing noise out of their ears, they noticed the announcer voice: "...controls online. Sector F backup six-nine-one offline. Technical support report on site immediately."

And all, then, lay nearly silent. The generator completely offline, along with the HEV, and the monster still sparkling a bit but definitely dead - or better, destroyed.

"...Just what the hell was that thing anyway?" commented Shephard.

"It was the thing that flew on your head several hours ago. It's been hunting us for a while now." answered a still dazed but sharp Gordon.

"Who cares, guys, let's get moving. If we can do this within the day, I'll be much happier." Gina seemed rather upset as she looked around for a way back up. "What the hell got hold of you in there, Gordon? You weren't scared, were you?"

"No... It was the noise. I don't know, just like those sonic dogs back in the blast pit. When I hear them, I just stay frozen. No control over myself, nothing."

"Excuse me, but what you're saying doesn't make the slightest kind of sense..." intervened Shephard.

"Well, what does today? First that Ethertel messing up things, then..."

"Wait, wait, wait, you said Ethertel?" Shephard looked alarmed.

"Yes, I analyzed that thing this morning. It started this whole affair, it would seem, though how could a resonance cascade provoke all this?"

"Resonance cascade... Yes."
He shook his head, then hesitated for an instant. Should he tell them? Well, they were part of the plan now, no point in not letting them on all he knew. Besides, it would help conquer their trust which by the way he was looked at even now still wasn't high.
"Etherthel, the material, was to be... 'recovered' in a mission early this morning. We didn't find it, for some reason, but then this G guy I've told you of somehow managed to do it. Or at least that's what I thought before the thing was placed in the 'destabilizer' which then neatly blew apart."

"Destabilizer, you say? What for?"

"I don't know exactly, but that was plan A for stopping the invasion, before it even began I think. Anyway, Etherthel created the resonance cascade which somehow let these guys loose. Without it, we're now at a last resort."

"Using the GRS, yes. But could you two have the decency of telling me what is a GRS?"

"Gordon..."

"No, tell him. He'd find out anyway."

"Our sources say it stands for Genetically Reinstated Soldier. They wipe a brain, and implant the personality of one of their best - but dying - soldiers. Then they modify it so they think they're just a scientist or something. But they can be tracked down at medium range somehow, it seems."

"I'm not too sure it's going that way. I've got another voice in my head that talks to me," she instantaneously felt twice embarrassed at having said such a thing.

"I don't know how this manifests, but it was a failed experiment for some reason, and that would explain why they put you here instead than on the front lines."

"...And who would be, 'they'?"

"The enemy. Some other enemy, I suppose."

"Anything to do with Professor Klenier?"

"Klenier! That name is familiar!"

"It really is... Like a distant dream - but I can't remember exactly..."

"Look, let's leave big revelations stuff for when it's all over and see how do we get out of here." stopped Shephard.

The platform was about two meters from the generator's floor, and twenty meters from there. No sign of ladders leading up.

"How about your jetpack?" asked Gordon.

Gina fiddled with the controls.

"Out of fuel. Figures. But I saw a few doors down there. Maybe one leads up?"

"Only one way to find out..." Gordon took a jump and dived down, followed shortly by the rest. He turned around, and each of them pointed and then headed for a different door. He moved for one, which unsurprisingly was shut, when he heard a louder bubble noise. Gina had hit gold it seemed, and was now pointing to the surface to talk. The two men followed, and Gordon, just as in training, could again witness how graceful her swimming style was. They came up, none with long breath as evidently even Shephard's suit had some kind of breathing equipment.

"OK, looks like our luck hasn't run out yet. There's a door to the Aquadome complex, but I don't know how far it actually is. I Hope we don't run out of oxygen... Your suit does have oxygen control, I see," Shephard nodded "So let's go."

They dived with ease, once again helped by their suits, but found the door barred. Gina attempted to move it, but it was hard to make lever underwater; then Gordon got in front and, with the crowbar, succeeded in bursting it open revealing bubbles of air quickly captured by the suit's capacitors, purified, and sent to top their reserves. They swam in, rhythmically moving water quickly becoming the only noise. The corridor there had definitely been flooded, and even now a seemingly empty steel barrel and several bags of what looked like chow floated a meter off the ground, where a tipped over metal cart was already showing first signs of rust. Cheap equipment, Gordon thought, as they moved further in and around a corner, to find that sometime before or during the flood much more damage had been caused: the ceiling had broken down in places, sending concrete blocks and steel reinforcements on the ground, the former beginning to form dust which clouded their vision as they passed through.

The next corridor was a dead end, except for the doors: almost every one of them had corroded or broken shut; evidently, these kind of fixtures weren't tested in such an environment. One, fortunately, gave way to Shephard's attempt without much resistance, and the three, their oxygen reserves at fifty percent, moved in to investigate. Only Gordon noticed the sign, now buried under a chunk of concrete beside the door; he was able to make out almost one third of it:

   GEROU
   ATURE
ESTIN
VAT

He then quickly followed the other two, hoping for the best.

*

*You heard the man, boys, numbers five, seven and eight break formation and fire at will.* An identical command was being issued by Eagle one.

*Roger Wilco Firebird One. I swear I'll never go see another sci-fi flic till retirement.*

*You've got to get there, Weschar. Three contacts plus one-zero-niner degrees, I think we can call them bombers, whaddaya think?* said Firebird Eight's copilot.

*Nah, I say gimme a sec and call them pieces of scrap.*

Less than a minute of flying revealed the alien fighters. They looked like very thick and gigantic manta rays, had their textures been conceived to mimetize over something Earth native, but still they fluttered in the sky with the same grace of the maritime creature, except looking much more deadly and without any discernible justification of their staying suspended in the air. They proved immediately to be well more than targets by performing themselves a quick turn and moving towards them at high speed, a long and thick shower of electricity thundering from their bowels to the ground below.

*Mantas. Damn, I used to love them as a kiddo.*

But only the ground they hit, as the three helicopters strafed out of the way and as one gained height, turned around and fired a Firestorm missile which streaked to the left, right and behind of their respective targets which then received a second wallop from the three Sidewinder missiles spewed from the F-16s coming in from behind the helicopters right towards the enemy.

The three ships, however, showed only a moment of panic and remained in the air, then broke formation while something the pilots hadn't noticed before began glowing.

*This is just why I hate dogfights,* were Weschar's last words as a streak of superheated plasma was expelled from the 360° capable turret, which blew through the helicopter so quickly neither he nor the copilot had a chance to react.

*

Underwater, it was hard to distinguish sounds - but a growl was a growl. Actually, several, rapid growls one after another, in the distance.

And then, after a corner, it went after them: even ten meters away it was easy to see how that thing was big, brown,   shark-like, sharp-toothed and definitely not friendly. Gordon had his Glock pistol in hand, and didn't have time to wonder why that instead of his MP5 or shotgun as the beast was stopped by an invisible wall with a thump, followed by several, even faster and louder growls, and by the creature turning around.

It was just a viewing window; they were safe - or so it seemed. Gordon put his gun away and moved on: the corridor turned into a stair, and the stairs surfaced into water. The three could finally breathe normally as the HEVs' special surface dried up within instants; Shephard's suit, instead, remained wet.

"By the way, Shephard, that suit isn't standard issue, isn't it?" Gina echoed Gordon's thoughts.

"Well, no. I'm in the blank on this one too, but it's got some sort of shield, on-retina light amplification, HUD, and several other things. I think it's somewhat an equivalent of your HEV."

"Light amplification... I wonder why they didn't think of that, this breastlight nearly got me killed once or twice." commented Gordon.

"You know why: it's a prototype. You've heard the voices, and they're all true: this thing has never seen any kind of real testing. We're finding its problems and limitations right about now." replied Gina.

"Well, if we live through this, I'll be sure to give a loooong chat to the developers, especially about those jok-"

A human shout stopped Gordon's answer, followed by a splash. They all moved quickly upstairs and found that someone had fallen inside the vat and was desperately fighting against the creature. The black man tried to swim for shore, and Gina moved to help, but the monster dashed from below, making the scientist spin in the air several meters from the surface, and end in its open mouth where snapping and crunching noises were soon dampened by the water as the creature submerged with its prey.
Silence, followed by blood surfacing, removed any kind of hope for the man's safety.

"Oh my God... Oh my God... Oh my God..."

Someone else was there. They looked up: there was a catwalk above the vat, which Gordon noticed it ended in a cage with something he couldn't make out well inside, and began from a door in the wall above from where another man was looking down, obviously shocked.

"Oh my God... No..."

"Uh, sorry we couldn't do anything for him..." attempted Shephard. The man closed his eyes and tried to snap back to reality. He was shocked, and was breathing heavily, but still he spoke.

"I'm... Professor Calgar. That... beast ate Zemac!"

"Sir, please calm down. Can we come up there?" Gina wanted to find out more.

"I... Yes, I think. The stairs should be there... My God..."

The three moved to another entrance in the wall, close to the above one but on the ground level, and quickly moved to the small control room. Calgar had crumbled on the ground, trying to calm.

"Now... Slowly, what the hell is that thing?"

"It's... Well, I'm not sure" his professional instinct kicked in at the question, and for a moment he was much calmer "they said it's been found in the pacific, but a quick DNA scan shows it's much more probable that it isn't even Earth native. It was rather calm, really, until this morning when all the mess began and monsters showed up and they started shooting AND KILLING AND..."

"Calm down, calm down!"

"Yes... Yes. Well, see, the water level is rising with each passing moment and doctor Zemac was going to try to kill the thing and activate the drainage before the entire section flooded, but the only weapon we have is the anti-shark neurotoxin crossbow but it's inside the control cage. Then he was distracted, slipped and fell in..." He closed his eyes again, trying to cancel the images "My God..."

"I see... But, anyway, are we far from Aquadome Two?" Gordon went to the point.

"Aquadome Two...? Well, usually no, but the pathway has been sealed. I don't know what those things are, but they destroyed our main way out."

"You mean there's another?"

"Yes, the drainage section of the vat leads to the central purification treatment, and from there it's easy to... But, who are you anyway?" the man's lucidity was increasing, Shephard noted. He remained a trained professional despite all.

"We, well... We're attempting to stop this all. We need to get to the missile silos beyond Aquadome Two, but we've gotten a little stuck." said Gina.

"Well... I suppose asking for more explanations will only bring more nonsense around, and I don't think I can bring myself to come with, whether you'd let me or not. If you are going to try, I can only wish you good luck."

"OK, boys, we need a plan."

"Let's flood the vat with grenades. They can explode underwater," tried Gordon

"Nah, we don't have enough grenades to cover that surface," replied Shephard.

"Plain old machinegun fire, then." suggested Gina

"We can't see the thing well enough, and it's far enough underwater that bullets will be slowed down until they do nothing to it anyway. Taking it underwater is out of the question, we'd have the same velocity problem and be stuck with my pistol."

Only now Gordon stopped to consider he didn't know what he was talking about.

"I have a pistol too, Gordon. But still, we'd need to do something crazy, isn't it?"

"Exactly." Gordon took a quick glance at the cage. "That thing is large enough only for one, so someone should get inside and snipe the thing. Who's the best shot here?"

"We're all good, as far as I've seen. But Shephard, you got sniper training, is it?"

"Well... OK, I was first of the class."

"You get the cage, then. We'll keep an eye on you from the CCTV, but try to be quick just in case."

"Roger that, sir, er, ma'am."

Shephard moved for the cage and almost slipped. The surface of the catwalk was definitely greasy - no wonder that poor man fell down to his doom as soon as their chatter distracted him. He slid inside, grabbed the crossbow, and activated the lowering mechanism only for it to break, and be plunged inside the vat.

*

"Foxtrot, any news?"

*Negative, sir. They've entered that chamber and then the sensors went blank. We picked up the generator over there malfunctioning, but that's it - it looks like there is a malfunction in the entire section.*

"We'll just have to wait." He switched frequencies. "Teams two and three, report in."

*We're in position, sir, awaiting contacts.*

"Remember, Freeman and the gal are dangerous, don't underestimate them. And don't forget I want them alive!"

*Roger. Over and out.*

The last teams were in position; now the bastards had no escape unless they could teleport. They would be going down once and for all!

*

He was trapped inside the cage! The cable snapped, it tilted and he was now lying prone, the exit now squarely blocked by the piece of concrete attached to the lowering mechanism. Water infiltrations must have weakened the ceiling too much. 'Talk about bad luck' he thought as he fruitlessly tried to move the block away.

Several, fast growls and the thing was heading towards him. More slowly than he would have wanted he brought the crossbow to ready and fired a bolt, which flew - rather, swam - to the position occupied by the monster two seconds before. Miscalculated. And only four shots plus a clip left.

He took aim again, but waited for the monster to come straight towards him instead than sideways. It came close, and he fired, the bolt hitting the monster at near full-speed but with no effect. The thing had one tough carapace!
Then two splashing sounds from above one quickly after another; Gordon and Gina had come to help him and right away fired their pistols at the fastest speed they could manage, but even while most of the shots hit home, they harmlessly bounced off the almost impervious carapace.

One lucky bullet, however, stroke a momentarily exposed eye that sent the monster into complete rage. It dashed towards Gordon, its mouth wide trying to bite him and the halo of bullets inside the throat managed only to slow it down as its jaws closed onto Gordon's HEV, despite his attempt to block them with the crowbar, which was just too short.

Gina had grabbed the thing's fin and was trying to joust it off Gordon, whose shield wouldn't be lasting much when two, successive bolts hit inside the mouth and sent the monster in pain. Its jaws opened back again and released Gordon, then Gina let go as the thing screamed and turned wildly, finally stopping as a third bolt hit home, as the lifeless body drifted towards the vat floor.

Their oxygen level was already at 50 percent; if they didn't act quickly Shephard was sure to drown.

They tried to move the piece of concrete, but it had wedged into the floor and seemed unmovable. The cage didn't yeld better results, but Gordon signaled Gina to stand back, as he dipped a grenade between the ground and the slab, pulled the pin and got away.
Shephard crouched, wide eyed, but incredibly enough the block was just blown apart without a single shrapnel coming his way, and he was now free.

Three seconds later and his supplies were exhausted but recharging, as he was now back on the surface.

"How the hell did you manage that thing, Gordon?"

"As I've been saying since this morning, I don't know. I've just went and done it. OK?"

"No, not okay. Stuff like that just makes me want to scream!"

"Temper temper, Gina! Calm down."

"Why should I want to calm down?" she said out loud, only to cup her mouth and get squinted at by both men.

"OK, we're even now. Don't ask about me, don't tell about your... 'voice'."

"He's a GRS, too. Yessir, I'm totally sure now, and I probably know what kind of GRS he is - or better, who he is..."

But the three just looked confused for a moment, then Shephard incited to move. "Shall we go? Like it or not, we still have the world to save."

*

He was being brought in the middle of nowhere. Driving for kilometers and kilometers had him exhausted, and now he found that the helicopters were gathering towards a mesa. A very large mesa, spanning many square kilometers, but why there? His question was soon answered. With the long-range camera he spotted something, something that was not human-made, flying above it. He took several pictures: they were so clear, he'd have a tough time proving they were not fakes. He drove faster ahead towards the mesa, and then stopped.

Was he having hallucinations already?

No. The mesa itself had blinked out of existence and showed just a mountain chain. There! It did it again. Yes, he was on to something very, very, VERY big. But he was now almost out of gas, and two kilometers away. Well, the sun was now setting, and a walk would only have done him good.

*

With but a minuscule splashing noise, the three emerged from the drainage pipe into the pool. Since professor Calgar was way too scared to move, they heavy heartedly left him to his fate and emptied the vat, following the water into this ankle-deep flooded room.

"Disgusting." commented Gordon, more in annoyance than real disgust.

The water was thick enough to make it hard to see the floor, and as soon as they spotted a ladder to the upper walkway they took it. The three moved along the steel catwalk, their boots thundering in what now appeared a cistern's silence, broken before only by dripping and flowing noises; there was only one exit, and they were going to take it.

As they reached it, instinctively, Gina set up to the left, Shephard to the right, and Gordon to the center for a three-man door opening: MP5 in hand as the rest except for Shephard, who still had only his Desert Eagle, the latter quickly scanned the room beyond as Gina exposed it by opening the door, and found it clear just as the other two had. There were several crates stacked outside, but it didn't seem to be a warehouse; as they entered and cleared it, their suspicions were proved by the flow monitoring equipment. More out of curiosity than anything else, Gordon got his tattered crowbar out and noisily pried a box open: sacks of unknown compostures, probably food, and a case of what the label indicated as neurotoxin-coated crossbow bolts.

"You might use this!" he said as he tossed it at Shephard who opened it and stored them in his suit - he never knew when sniping would be useful.

The room had two doorways leading out, one opposite the other but seemingly leading to the same room; Gina and Gordon went for one each.

"I have a bad feeling about this, guys..." Gina said "Shephard, heads up."

"Roger." His urban combat suit didn't mix too well with the gray concrete walls, so he stood low as he exited from the left doorway which had more crate coverage and moved out until he could see the entire room.
It wasn't too large, but silent enough that their light footsteps were a bit too audible if anyone (or should he just say anything now?) was listening. In the center, a raised platform with transparent floor over a glassed-in water tank, with more equipment over it. He briefly wondered what its use was, then Gordon snapped his finger, demanding attention, and pointed to a large door on the far side to Shephard. The sign beside it probably told there was a way back to the Aquadome or the train tracks, though from the setting they were now in it appeared much more probable the former.

Shephard remained where he was, hidden and ready to provide more cover, but was forced to spectator as twenty-plus marines in urban combat fatigues burst in from three sides, surrounding the two who tried to escape, only for their suits to be hit by the shockwave of a grenade.

He quickly did a frequency scan and soon hit gold.

*...work. They work!*

*Well, next time we'll employ EMPs from the start, so we won't have more of these bastards!*
A man spit on the two powerless bodies on the floor. *Try to kick our asses now!*

*Yeah!* *Yeah!* Another man went and kicked Gordon right in the now unshielded face. *This one's for Gerra, bastard!*

*Slow it, Alson, slow it... But really, should we bring these two back to Mr. Silo 12-H for questioning or kill them now?*

There was a moment of pause as they contemplated the offer, then another one of them spoke.

*What are you thinking, guys? Questioning! We'll have more fun, and besides, we'll kill them anyway!*

There were several chuckles, and then eight marines, four each, carried the powerless suits as their hosts were incapable of anything but terrorized looks while their captors moved them towards the door Gordon had pointed.

Silo 12-H. They had set the base right where they had to be going... There's no limit to bad luck, thought Shephard, but he had to do something. As soon as everyone was gone, he picked up Gordon's MP5 to replace his lost one and moved to the door to peek. They shouldn't notice him as they weren't much intent in doing anything but chuckling, teasing the powerless two, and going home.

He followed them for over twenty minutes, and then he reached outside. The desert sun was still hot, even as the day was winding to the end - what time was it, six? seven? he didn't know - but he spotted a Chinook waiting for them. He didn't dare venture too much outside, especially after he saw an F-16 and an Apache streak in hot chase of an unknown vessel in the distance. It had to be one of those that downed his Osprey and nearly killed him!

Then they moved out of view, and he returned to more pressing matters as the Chinook was now full and taking off, only to land a few blocks beyond. Silo 12-H had to be close... But how to get there? There was only one option: the Aquadome. He turned back in, and followed the sign he had already spotted on the way out, moving as quickly and stealthily as he could. There wasn't much time left.

*

"We are not alone, my brother! We are not alone!"

"Ssstop it! Go away!"

G was holding his head as he spoke.

"What's going on, G?" asked D, looking up from a console.

"We are not alone?" he responded.

"Of course we aren't, and you of all know it. What's up with you now?"

The skinny man shook his head clear of thoughts.

"Nothing. Let's jussst proceed."

"Well, until Shephard comes back with our package, we can run as many drills as you want but they won't be realistic."

"For once, jussst listen to me. When we open the portal we need to be absolutely ready..."

*

As soon as the monsters spotted him they went to charge up, 'slaves' he remembered from briefing. But he didn't have time for battles and as such, one 40mm grenade later, he had ran and jumped across some train tracks, slaves still in pursuit. He glanced to the right for long enough to realize he was very close to the site of the accident. Had Gordon pulled the lever when he was told to, they wouldn't have been in this mess.

Nevertheless they were, and as such he had to move. He dashed down a flight of stairs, into a recently opened small door reminiscent of scarce use, his athletic training unhindered by the PCV; he seemed to have outran the enemy. Only his boots were now making any real noise: he quickly scanned the environment while he moved in, featureless dull concrete- or steel-gray walls, as most of the facility it seemed, with signs of a gunfight from around the corner; the wall to his left had some bullet holes and an arm was visible on the ground.

He slowed down. There was hurry, but no reason to die of stupid misattention. Peeking beyond he was briefly overwhelmed by the slew of bodies lying on the floor. Over ten total, some having fought until the end, some hit in the back while retreating, but all with an expression of horror on their faces - all that still had a face he could still recognize, at least. Thankfully, at least no sign of the aggressors.

He read the blood-splattered sign on the wall beside the slaughter: laboratory Alpha... down the corridor. He moved quickly, reading all the tags on the doors. Most were either blown open or barricaded, as was the only intersection he crossed to the end of the corridor, which contained only an elevator. Laboratory Alpha this way. with his luck, he had to know that it would be the longest way around.

He opened the door and found the elevator in perfect shape: the monsters hadn't gone this way, which might mean traversing this place could be easy. Foolish thing to think. As soon as the elevator completed its quick and silent descent he was welcomed by trashed equipment and more signs of gunfights in a room that could have looked a fairly decent lobby early that morning.

Once again, bodies everywhere.

He knew they were lethal, and had witnessed that to some extent. But they weren't just lethal; also very efficient. Kill everyone, then move on trying to leave as much equipment intact as possible - they were also intelligent, he knew, and they probably thought that a place like this could hold technology that may further their powers. Evil aliens invading Earth, he thought for a second trying to remember what he would've thought of that just three years ago: a bad movie's plot. And now he moved quickly around dead bodies, broken ceiling tiles and a barricade to reach the entry booth. There was no one beyond the glass to check for his ID, or at least no one alive as it was very dark there. And the door he would be guarding was blown open anyway.

As he went to pass through, a sound of creaking electricity attracted him to the window, which had now lit bright green.
This, he knew, was not a good sign.
He ran inside and found himself in a corridor running from his left to his right. He turned left, as the right part had only one door and it led to the booth, from which were now coming inhuman shrieks. Whatever it was, he had never heard it before. Thus, it had to be one of the more advanced soldiers, and for that he would have rather steer well clear.

On none of the doors there was any kind of reference to Laboratory Alpha, so he continued to the end and was in the real Aquadome. Just like in a very expensive aquarium, the walls all around him were totally transparent - including the floor but only from a certain point on, probably not to scare people in thinking they would plunge down. And what was even better is that there was nothing of the 'lens' effect that gave him headaches when he visited London's Aquarium with his school aeons ago. But there was no time to marvel. He could now hear the security door on the booth being thumped on, so he rushed to the end of the transparent corridor to the opposite door, which the sign close by indicated as his next destination.

But the door had a retina scanner, and was as sturdy as the security measure implied.

"You're not going to open that on your own, I'm afraid."

The voice had come from the desk close to the door.

"Who are you?"

"I'm Professor Klad. I hid myself inside the studying cage to escape those... creatures."

"Look, it's a really long story, but I need to get to Laboratory Alpha ASAP. And, there's one of those things coming in soon. Can you help me?"

"Laboratory Alpha... Oh, yes, it's not too far though I hope it..."

"Will you help me or not?"

"Yes, yes... Of course. Just press the green button on the teleporter control. It's the cage-looking device in the middle of the corridor."

Shephard moved quickly, and as he pressed the button the machine began to hum higher and higher until finally, in a flash of blinding light, a man in a wetsuit appeared out of thin air inside the machine, stepped out and removed the helmet.

"Whew! I hate teleporters. Wish they implemented some more tested equipment such as..."

But then, he noticed clearly the thumpings coming from the booth, made a horrified impression and quickly moved to the retinal scanner. The door whooshed open, and they entered the inner chamber, sealing the door behind them just as they heard a loud crashing noise. They had a little more time.

"As I suspected."

The corridor beyond had three large water tanks lined up on the left wall, with inside each of them something that looked far from terrestrial. But they moved on, only to find the rest of the corridor had crumbled.
Then the thumps on the door began, but were quickly preceded by more electricity noises which signaled teleportation. They had to act quick.

"OK, in here!"

Klad opened another retina-protected door, closed it behind them and started a machine which looked like the teleporter device he'd used a while before.

"If I could just set it for... There! Go in, now!" He pushed Shephard inside the steel cage, which closed behind him as the hums began fluctuating.

"This is an old model, I hope there's no problems..."

A blue sphere formed in front of Shephard, outside the cage, its light quickly becoming blinding.

"Yes... Yes... Come on..."

Then, streaks of electricity hit from the sphere to the control console. "NOOOO!" shouted Klad as he was lifted a meter in the air by the explosion, and slammed into the wall then dropping to the floor, unconscious.

"DAMN!"

He tried to get out, but there was no way to stop the process from here. Besides, the enemy was now just beyond this door: he could only continue and hope for the best. But he began really to fear for his life as more thunders creakt from the sphere to hit objects at random: a computer, a piece of concrete, then the door. He turned to be face to face with the high-ranking monsters that would kill him, but he could not turn, as he felt dropping into the void.

*

As the chopper touched down, the General was almost joyous. As soon as those two had resurfaced on the sensors, they were all over them. And now, revenge! ...But he calmed down after actually seeing the two being carried down the chopper and into the compound. Concentration, duty, not bloodthirst. Well, not hot bloodthirst at least. Revenge is a dish best served raw.

"Sir? Foxtrot reports more energy sources coming from not too far, underground!"

"More like these two?"

"Signatures are similar but signatures are not confirmed. Report is that they appeared out of nowhere and began moving. Headcount is five, sir."

"Well... Put the base on full alert."

"We already are in full alert, sir."

"Then let's hope those bastards stay away from here."

"Roger, sir!"

He turned, and greeted Gordon and Gina with a chuckle.

"Well, well. Who doesn't die gets caught and killed, isn't it? Get them inside!"

He followed the eight men as they entered the main building. The General pressed a button on a remote control, and then all climbed in, the remote control's button being pressed again.

"I told you, I know..." *SMACK!* "TALK YOU BASTARD! I know that..."

"Lock him away, Major. We've got more interesting people to talk to."

The two were dropped on chairs.

"Let's get those things off them, shall we?"

Two men tried to open Gina's, actively touching her. She of course tried to react, but again the shut down suit was too heavy for her to move anything from her neck below by more than a millimeter. Still, neither soldier found a way.

"How does this thing open?"

"There has to be a safety release in case of failure..."

Uh-oh! The soldiers over her became four, and they turned her belly down. The HEV's spine holder was then lifted slightly, and the suit's clamps released. She was now being pulled out of the suit, the warm environment hitting her underwear-protected body like exposure to a furnace, used as she was to the perfect temperature inside.
Gordon soon followed, just as her not resisting nor aiding them, and as her was crudely bound to a chair with a rope. Finally, the most important-looking soldier spoke to them.

"Let me introduce myself. I'm General Gandahar - you can call me sir, or daddy if you prefer. Don't worry, I won't kill you. I'll just bring you near, let you rest, and then give you to a few other guys who'll do the same. You two aren't going to die that easily."

Both grimaced. Only Shephard could do something now - if he could get here in time...

*

The computer... The column... And the door. They were all there, drifting towards the bottom of this vat. He instinctively swam up, but after noticing that there wasn't a 'surface' to speak of here, he scanned for other exits and moved towards the only one, something that looked more of a drainage pipe than anything.
He quickly found that proceeding further down the pipe was impossible due to a grate, but right above him he spotted an opening. A small and dark maintenance shed, probably one for extreme emergencies as it was incredibly dark and all the equipment was tightly sealed in water-proof containers. A corridor soon led more underwater. He followed it, and finally emerged to another vat. This one was populated by small, white worm-like creatures.

They appeared harmless, and so he moved quickly towards the next underwater corridor, which thankfully led to an airlock. The push of a button, and the chamber began to pressurize as water flowed out. He exited, trying to be as sneaky as his wet boots' squeaking on the concrete floor allowed, and found he was now back in the complex of corridors. More signs of gunfights and bodies lied around: his thought shifted back to the certainly now-dead Klad.

Professor Klad. He would remember the name, for when this was all over and the world came to know what happened here today, his name would be written in the annals of history and remembered as a hero. As would be all the guys in the Sector F infirmary, D, G and of course all the people who certainly had helped Gordon and Gina on the way.

But that would be the future. He just had to make sure it happened.

Thankfully, the Aquadome seemed extensive enough that it required signs for local workers not to get lost; after passing through a broken x-ray scanner, he was just one doorway out of Hydrofauna Studies Laboratory Alpha.
If the transparent laboratory of before looked magnificent, this was at least twice as much for it was not only twice as big, but also much more densely populated.
Varieties of swimming creatures, most only vaguely terrestrial, moved in their confined environment like nothing of this was going on. How peaceful they would've looked - if he could somehow forget what was happening.

He moved quickly inside the laboratory, spotting some dead bodies lying at their desks, hidden from first sight as they were by more analysis and control equipment, but the fight seemed to have been over quickly.
At least they hadn't suffered.
He was looking around, looking for some sort of outside or, more probably, surface access.
One exit in particular was much wider and taller than the others: he investigated. Beyond, a short corridor led to an elevator platform. He was about to check for a sign, but he decided for a dash as echoing electrical surges signaled that several monsters were teleporting in the room behind.

He slapped the button for the topmost floor but had the chance to see one of them: tall, vaguely fish-looking, with six eyes and running fast towards the door, which closed by the millisecond in front of him. That was strange - they looked nothing like the others, almost if they were... Nah, just 'evolved' - naturally or genetically. Or so said the briefing.
But as soon as he was out of the elevator, it was called down. Whatever they were, they were smart enough.
He was now outside, on what looked like a scarcely used stocking area, and just after a left bend in the road there it was: Silo 12-J, then, further on, a wall. No, it had to be on the opposite side, certainly further down the road. Using the crossbow's built-in scope, he spied: yes, there was a makeshift helipad just opposite the entrance, currently occupied by the same Chinook he saw, and three men plus two autoturrets much like the ones he used were just outside the entrance.

The elevator was now coming up; time for a little surprise.

*

The sound of machinegun fire woke Gordon up from his stunned daze. Was Shephard...? That would have been insane, but soon a man rushed inside and yelled "We're under attack! There's ten of those things and they're charging right for us!"

General Gandhar ran outside the room, leaving only the radio man to watch over them. No more than a few seconds later, electricity sparks and inhuman shouts were answered by machine gun fire; they were entrenched pretty well, but the fight would not be one sided. Neither he nor Gina could see outside, but a particular human cry sent a shiver on the lieutenant's back.

"We..." attempted Gordon.

"Don't talk. I'm not listening to you. You are monsters and you will be tortured and die. So shut up or I'll show you how Earth treats unwelcome guests like you!"

His MP5 would've taken much more to wear down his shield than he to jump over him and break his neck - were he in his HEV. And so he waited, patiently, as did Gina.

*

As he expected, the monsters knew their priorities and happily ignored this lone target to concentrate on the larger group, as did the opposition. The battle was tough, but the first round was alien's; the machine guns had taken too long to disengage from him and lock onto the monsters, and soon they both fell from the monsters' electrocuting weapons. The soldiers fired a few grenades, of which only one caused any damage, and ran inside followed by the alien legion.
Confusion reigned inside, and he quietly slipped in as soon as the fight moved away from the gate, just a second after he spotted another group coming from below.

Where would they be now, he asked himself. Well, the camp wasn't that big, especially since most of it was picketed in the fences that surrounded each of the three, circular depressions in the ground. He moved along the perimeter towards what seemed like an entrance, of course guarded by two autoturrets, under which he crawled effortlessly as their 'attention' was being drawn elsewhere.

The sound of a helicopter brought his sight towards the sky: there it was, a lone AH64D aiming its machine gun at the second group and mowing a few of them down in a blink. But that wasn't what impressed him - that were the dozens aircrafts in the sky. Some so distant to be as small as blotches, some so close as to be perfectly distinguishable, but most circling far above Black Mesa engaging other crafts. Even without seeing the Abrams Battletanks being airlifted, he knew they had to hurry now more than ever!

Now behind the machine guns, he ran inside. A short stairwell, no doubt to the launch and control center, on which he began to move only to stop cold and look around.

C4-mines were wired in spots, probably enough to blow a man apart with shrapnel but sparse enough not to compromise the structural integrity of the place and make any attempt at destroying them with a grenade useless. And naturally, dozens of state-of-the-art remote activated decoy-proof motion sensors sprawled liberally on the steps, the closest of which he was just about to step on.

But even if clever, a quick check showed that they forgot to put triggers the small stacking space just beside the stairs. The crate there seemed sturdy enough, and after climbing over he could jump and reach the top of the well, and sidestep into the door.

Eight for the attempt, two for the execution - dumbasses.

"Who the...?" but the lieutenent didn't have time to react as three point-blank .357 shots splattered his face beyond recognition.

"Shephard! You..."

"No time for anything. There's more monsters and military guys out there to start a war, we've got to get the hell out of here now! Are you in any shape to move?"

The two looked rather beat, nevertheless he moved to unbind them. After quickly regaining their respective HEVs, a neverending moment later, the suits had attuned again to their hosts and the on-board medical system engaged, injecting painkillers and stimulants. Still not particularly battleworthy, but surely better than before - at least they hadn't gotten their other weapons; as if in one mind, Gina picked up the lieutenant's MP5 while Gordon prepped his shotgun. Shephard had in the while moved out of the room, and walked quickly at the opposite side of the small corridor he'd entered after avoiding the trap. The textbook definition of control room, definitely: large, two floored, and a big 3D semitransparent representation of Earth in the middle.
And of course, several bodies laying around.

Moving down each computer, the three scanned the equipment.

"This is a mess..."

"No, wait. It's here I think. This is the launch console." Gordon carefully moved a body to sit on the chair it was occupying, and began fiddling with the computer.

"This had already logged in, he probably bought it when the soldier came. Let's see... procedures. Launch. Silo. Lambda... lambda... No, launch... Satellite?" "There it is, Lambda two!" pointed Gina. "OK, launch procedure... Initiated. And now? 'Awaiting authorization'."

"Uh-oh, they don't mean these two?" Gina pointed at two keyholes on the desk, distant enough that no single person could possibly activate them both at once.

"Let's see..." Shephard browsed the body's pockets. In one he found a key with a Black Mesa symbol and the number 12-H on the opposite sides of the attached tag.

"Just one more, I suppose. Let's split up!"

Gina and Gordon moved through each aisle and patted down the bodies. It wasn't something either was eager to do, but it was for an higher cause. Or so they continued to tell themselves, as the stench of the rigor mortis filled their nostrils just as the sounds of battle were filling their ears.
Shephard moved out to explore the last room of the corridor. It had been crudely locked with a broom, and as he opened the door he found another beat up person inside, cowering.

"AAAH! I TOLD YOU EVERYTHING! I DON'T KNOW ANYTHING ELSE!"

"Calm down, calm down!"

"I TOLD YOU EVERYTHING! LEAVE ME ALONE!"

"Just CALM DOWN! I'm not with the bad guys! We need to launch missile Lambda Two, do you have the authorization key?"

"YES! YES! HERE IT is... Did you say, Lambda Two?"

"Yes, Lambda two."

"Then... My God, you really are with the good guys! Let me come to help!"

He rushed out of the cramped room and moved into the control room, where he recognized the two HEVs as belonging to Black Mesa employees. He turned briefly to look towards the outside door, but the firefight only made him move even quicker to the console.

"Right. We need..." he looked at the body on the ground. "Calm... Calm... Lot of calm and nerve..." He took a breath and inserted his key, mimicked by Gordon.

"OK, on my mark... Three, two, one, MARK!"

Both keys were turned, and the room turned to a red haze. The man then moved towards the 3D representation of Earth, and pressed an invisible button in its center.

"Right. One more thing to do, follow me."

They moved back into the room Gordon and Gina had been locked in, which had also lightened in a red haze, while the man tried hard not to look at the fresh body on the floor. He pressed a button on the wall, and two slits opened up to show the outside strife. The soldiers were winning, as there was but a pocket of resistance left - yet the bodies that littered the floor told it was not a simple battle.

Another button, and the door slid closed as a warning siren echoed, distracting the fighters for a split second. Several others, and one of the pits began opening up as a countdown started.

"Ten, nine, eight, seven, six..." The soldiers had begun retreating quickly; It would have not been healthy to stay outside in a while. One fell as the monsters, ignoring what was happening, took potshots at the fleeting force while the earth began shaking

"Five, four, three..." They had entered a fairly large shack at the opposite side of the compound. That would be another problem.

"Two, one."

The ground was shaking so violently the four almost lost balance, and then an incredibly loud thrusting noise - which remained such even while being suppressed by the room's strong audio filters - preceded a large missile exiting the well at escape velocity. Their ears rang for minutes, and it was a bit until they could hear themselves.

"Just a question... What was in that thing?" inquired Gina

"A satellite. The exact twin of the Xeno Project satellite that was launched I think forty years ago. One of the most mysterious launches we've done, the legend says, as those missiles turned up almost overnight and launch was scheduled half an hour in advance. Orders came down from administration itself."

"And what does it do?" she furthered.

"All I know is that the Lambda team was in charge of the operation. But this 'Xeno' prefix tells me it has something to do with these creatures!"

"Lambda? That's where our HQ is. It was probably Lambda team that told us to launch the thing... Well, certainly we weren't hunting red herrings. Which reminds me..." He pointed outside. The monsters had become extra crispy during the launch, but it wouldn't be long until the soldiers get out of their refuge and come to check on their prisoners.

"Look, you have any idea of where the uplink station is?" tried Gordon.

"Uplinking station... No. But my bet is it's somewhere around the middle of the complex, probably on mount Canavaux. Just go... northeast, I think, and you can't miss it. It's the tallest place inside the complex."

"Good. But we've got to get out of here, and quick!"

The man thought for a second.

"...There's the residue processing section. You can reach it from here, but be careful, it's supposed to be an..."

A loud explosion close by. One of the creatures must have survived, and had tried climbing the stairs! The three moved out to see that while the explosive was enough for a human, it was not for one of these things, as it was beginning to stand up. It didn't, however,  for as one the three took out their weapons and aimed at the head. It took just a few shots to end the threat.

"Oh... God! As... As I was saying..."

"We'll find out on the way, let's just move!"

"OK, follow me. It's here!"

Sliding a computer bank in the room he had been locked in, an hatch large enough to crawl in but still very cramped was then opened, a very faint smell of sewage and combustible trickling into the room.

"I'll go first." Gina turned on her breastlight and moved in. Gordon was followed by and Shephard was to be the last. But as he turned around from the entrance, which he'd been covering up to that moment, something jumped up from the dead creature's body aiming for his neck and sending him in devastating pain as it slashed through to the brain cortex.

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