Abyss Deep. Ian Douglas

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Abyss Deep - Ian  Douglas

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a terrifying moment I was way too busy for only two hands, but I slapped the sealant in place, then pulled out a glass specimen container for the M550 round, which was now drifting toward the bulkhead at a bit less than a meter per second, reached out, and scooped it up just before it hit the wall. As I sealed the cap, the bullet abruptly dissolved, filling the vial with an inky black syrup. My breath caught in my throat; if the stuff was programmed to disassemble everything, the vial would dissolve in less than a second, and then we would have a cloud of charged nano-­D floating into the interior of Capricorn Zeta.

      But … no. The glass contained the ink, and I let out a deep and fervent breath of relief. The stuff must have been programmed to go after carbon, and the silica molecules—­silicon dioxide—­of the glass were beyond its scope. The scalpel and the N-­prog both hit the bulkhead and clung there, and a second later my patient and I thumped against the wall as well.

      WHAT … IS … HAPPENING?

      “I’m hoping the Marines managed to hack into the station’s drive,” I told herm, “and are boosting us back into a stable orbit. Um … can you let go of my legs now?” The largest of those tentacles, as thick as my thigh and a ­couple of meters long, were strong.

      Obligingly, they unfurled, then coiled up again into a tight ball. I picked up the N-­prog and used it to call up a scan of the being’s internal systems, ordering the nanobots still inside to spread out and give me a full-­body image.

      The major bleeders, I noted, had been sealed off. Good. Both hearts were throbbing in lockstep with each other, first one, then the other, and both appeared to be beating steadily. My downloaded medical data suggested that the M’nangat’s temperature, respiration, and heart rate all were more or less within normal ranges. That was a damned good thing, too, since I didn’t have the nano programming or drugs to change them if they were off.

      Down near the creature’s base I saw three small shadows. Buds. The growing young that in all probability would kill the M’nangat at parturition.

      The shudder of the base’s engines cut off, and once again, we were in microgravity. I completed my examination. What I could understand appeared to be working okay; I just wished I understood more.

      “Okay, Gunny?” I called. “I’ve got the patient stabilized. We need a medevac, though, to someplace that understands Broc physiology.”

      “We have a ­couple of medevacs inbound, Doc.” Hancock replied. “Your friend’ll be heading down to San Antone.”

      “Excellent.”

      The San Antonio Military Medical Center—­usually abbreviated as “SAMMC” and pronounced “Sam-­sea”—­was an enormous installation located at Fort Sam Houston on the northeast edge of San Antonio, Texas. It was where I’d had my Navy Hospital Corps training and where I’d gone to Advanced Medical Technology School a few months later. The naval hospital there is our biggest and best, and if any human facility could handle M’nangat physiology, they could.

      “How about our wounded?” I asked.

      “Sergeant Rutherford is doing okay,” Hancock replied. “Private Donohue is tech-­dead.”

      “How long?”

      “Six … six and a half mikes.”

      Fuck.

      The human brain starts to break down the moment blood stops flowing through it. After three minutes, it might just be possible to bring a person back with little or no brain damage. Longer than that, though, and the damage from oxygen starvation is irreversible. The person is “tech-­dead,” technically dead, and is going to need extensive stem-­cell grafts and transplants for the brain to be brought back on-­line again.

      And that’s why we use CAPTR technology to try to put the patient’s mind back in his brain after we’ve repaired it. It doesn’t always work. More often than not it doesn’t. If there’s been too much damage and neuron replacement, the CAPTR download won’t take.

      And if it does, the Marine becomes a “zombie,” shunned or worse by other Marines. They’re usually redeployed to a different unit after they recover, to avoid being ostracized by superstitious nonsense.

      Caryl Donohue had been brain dead too long for me to be able to pull her back.

      Would it have made a difference if I’d been able to treat her within a minute or two of being hit? There was no way to tell. Everything depended on the severity of the wound.

      But I did know that she would have had a better chance if I’d been there, if I hadn’t been trying to gentle that nano-­D round out of the M’nangat carrier’s chest.

      And that made me feel … guilty, somehow. Like I’d not been doing my job. Like I’d let down another member of the platoon.

      I didn’t want to think about that. “What’s the situation, Gunny?” I asked, changing the topic. In any case, I wanted to know if the mission had succeeded … or if it had all been for nothing.

      “We’re in good shape,” Hancock replied. “The bastards planted a blocker virus in the thruster control system, but First Platoon touched down on the rock and took direct control of the thrusters. They hardwired a new control system into the jets, and that let us stabilize the rock’s orbit.”

      So, the bad guys had sabotaged Capricorn Zeta’s controls so that no matter what we’d done, the station and a one-­kilometer asteroid would have burned into Earth’s atmosphere and impacted somewhere on the surface moments later. First Platoon had been on an approach vector above and behind us, with the goal of landing on the asteroid itself and securing the thruster complex. Evidently, the plan had worked.

      “We were thirty-­five minutes from re-­entry,” Hancock added, “and about forty from impact.”

      “Where?”

      “Somewhere just south of Japan.”

      In many ways, an ocean impact is far worse for the planet than having an asteroid come down on solid ground. Billions of tons of water flashed into vapor … a thick cloud ceiling over most of the planet reflecting the heat of the sun back into space … and, oh yes, titanic tidal waves racing across the ocean at the speed of sound. The western coast of the Americas would have been hard hit.

      But it would have been a hell of a lot worse for Japan and both Chinas. Again, it didn’t seem logical that the North Chinese were behind the terror attack on Capricorn Zeta. They would have been vulnerable to an impact anywhere in the Pacific basin—­a bull’s-­eye covering one-­third of the planet. But if not them, who?

      That, however, was for the politicians to argue about. Right now, it was our job to finish securing the mining station, making sure the black hats hadn’t planted any bombs or otherwise compromised the base. We also had to process the rescued hostages, still floating around with their hands zip-­tied behind them. This meant interviewing each one, comparing their story with both station computer records and records off the Net, checking their DNA to make sure each man or woman was who he or she claimed to be, and evacuating the wounded shoreside. The Marines were taking care of that part of the evolution.

      My job was to prep our wounded for evac … and to pull suit recordings on the Marines who’d been hit. Marine combat armor has simple-­minded AIs resident within the electronics that keep a log of events in a battle. What a Marine does wrong during a firefight

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