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Journey Into The Forbidden West Part 1

Author: 

  • E. E. Nalley

Caution: 

  • CAUTION: Sex / Sexual Scenes
  • CAUTION: Violence

Audience Rating: 

  • Restricted Audience (r)

Publication: 

  • 7,500 < Novelette < 17,500 words

Genre: 

  • Science Fiction
  • Adventure
  • Fanfiction

Permission: 

  • Posted by author(s)
  • Fan-Fiction, poster's responsibility
Journey Cover FINAL.png
Journey Into
The
Forbidden West
A Horizon: Forbidden West Fan Fiction
by

E. E. Nalley

April 22nd, 3040

The Strider's gait swayed slowly beneath Aloy as she rode. The sun was beginning to set, casting the bad lands around her in sharp reds, painting the desert like nothing she had ever seen before. In her ear, her Focus beeped, letting her know it had patched the corruption of one of the files she had downloaded from GAIA Prime. “Data Integrity Restored,” the device informed her. “GAIA log: 3Febuary2065 R.”

“Playback,” she commanded as her eyes cleared the boulder she'd been riding around and it finally came into sight, right were Travis said it would be. In her ear, she heard her own voice, though from a thousand years ago when it belonged to the scientist who had almost single-handedly saved the Earth from complete extinction; the woman Aloy herself was a genetic duplicate of.

The voice was older, and obviously tired. “Ok, GAIA. Sorry about that. Where was I?”

“You were telling a story,” the AI replied. This was not the warm, confident voice Aloy had heard in the last microseconds of GAIA's existence in her first and last message to her. The character and timber were there, but none of the assurity. Somehow, if such a thing were possible, the program sounded young, and unsure of herself.

There wasn't much left of the ranch. A water tower that was only standing from force of habit and had more holes through it than not. The split rail fence was almost completely gone, but the bit that framed the arch was still there and she could just make out Sobeck Ranch in much faded paint over the lintel. “Right. Yeah, so like I was saying, it was a children's electronics kit, but I'd hacked the wiring to an auto battery and solar PV so the grass caught fire. So did a tall pine that'd stood there for, I don't know, maybe a hundred years?”

Aloy's green eyes flicked from the rusted out remains of one of the Ancient's vehicles, almost completely reclaimed by the desert to a darkened stump just beyond the fence. It had been cut level, a thousand years ago, but the char of the fire was still visible. “Query,” GAIA's voice replied. “You were how old?”

“Six.” Aloy took in the ruin of the house, it had long since caved in on its self. Only the four corners remained, with some minor piles of bricks and the stone foundation for a porch that was rotted away. “My mother was home, thank God, so she called the fire department and after, she took me out to the lawn and showed me...” The scientist sighed softly in regret. “She showed me the dead baby birds. Because there had been nests in the pine tree.”

“Query: what did you feel?” Aloy gently tugged on the Strider to make it stop and when it did, she slid off the machine, not truly believing what she saw.

“I'm not sure,” Elisabet admitted, shame in her voice even after all the years that had passed. “I, uh, remember yelling that I didn't care. And that's when my mother took my face in her hands...and spoke.”

Aloy walked cautiously forward, before her, between her and the ruin of the house, a bench had been a part of some kind of garden arrangement. There was a stone basin with water in it, and around the bench, in a perfect triangle, as if tended were purple flowers swaying gently in the breeze. But that wasn't all, on the bench, it's back to her, was a figure. “Query: what did she say?”

There was some ivy that had grown over the bench, and some over the figure itself as Aloy slowly rounded it, unwilling to step over the flowers for a moment, until she could better see what she faced. “She said I had to care,” Dr Sobeck informed the program. “She said, 'Elisabet, being smart will count for nothing if you don't make the world better.'”

Aloy swallowed, for the first time in her life, she felt irrational fear. On the bench was an Ancient environmental suit. The same suit Elisabet had been wearing in the hologram she had watched at the memorial Dr Ronson had made for her sacrifice. The suit was still intact, the head slumped over as if the wearer had fallen asleep on the bench, looking at the house she had grown up in. “'You have to use your smarts to count for something, to serve life, not death.'”

The ivy had grown over the suit, almost like a blanket she had wrapped around her shoulders to ward off against the desert chill at night. Aloy swallowed again, and took a careful step over the flowers to approach the body. She touched her Focus and it briefly interfaced with the suit and over the breast, a hologram lit up labeling it 'Dr. E. Sobeck' and 'Life Functions Terminated.' “You often tell stories of your mother,” GAIA continued in the recording. “Yet, you are childless.”

The regret in Elisabet's voice was palpable. “I never had time,” she whispered. “I guess it was...for the best.”

“If you had had a child, Elisabet,” GAIA asked. “What would you have wished for him or her?”

“I guess...” Sobeck pondered after a long moment of silence. “I would have wanted...her...to be...curious.” The Focus painted an image of Doctor Sobeck's face over the helmet. The suit must have run out of air, or been commanded to stop filtering it and become a sealed system. Her body was not decayed and her eyes were closed as if she had fallen asleep from the lack of oxygen and died peacefully. “And willful; unstoppable even, but with enough compassion to...heal the world... Just a little bit.”

Aloy's eyes misted and she looked down, away from her genetic mother to see something shiny clutched in her right hand. Cautiously, the Nora Brave gently took it, finding a globe of the Earth on a necklace. She held it up against her breast, blinking back tears to finally have something from her mother, some legacy to cherish. “Anyway,” Dr Sobeck said tiredly, “that's all I've got for now, GAIA. Time to tuck in.”

“I wish you a pleasant sleep, Elisabet.”

“Thank you. I'll catch you tomorrow.”

* * *

September 16th, 3040

It had been a busy six months since Travis Murray, former Colonel in the United States Army, now the head of security for the Aerospace Firm American Scientific, had survived Doomsday. Six months ago, Colonel Murray and the rest of humanity had faced the extinction of all life on Earth, thanks to a rogue swarm of self replicating war robots manufactured by Faro Automated Solutions; a modern day Faro Plague. Fortunately, Travis had chosen well in his employment when he had switched careers from soldiering to security guard, because he had managed to find employment with a moral man. A man who, when informed he faced the end of the world, spat in Death's eye and fought. Not only for himself, or even just his family; Frank Olmstead, the CEO and Founder of American Scientific had been offered a golden ticket. A place on Humanity's first interstellar space craft, the Odyssey; for him and his family at the low, low price of one billion dollars each.

Frank Olmstead, however, had never run away from a fight in his life.

Not only that, Frank had proven time again he took care of his people. When many would have taken the cowards way out, Frank thought quickly and found a way to save himself, his family, and all of his employees still in the United States. In the remote Fusion Engine Research Facility at Almagre Mountain, Frank Olmstead had spared no expense turning it into a bunker, stocked with everything that even might be remotely needed to survive the coming apocalypse. Finally, he then provided a suspended animation capsule of his company's own design for every one of his employees and their families. And so, American Scientific had gone to sleep on Doomsday, and woken up a thousand years in the future.

It had been everything, but easy.

They had woke to find a world that had been renewed by the desperate long shot gamble of Elisabet Sobeck and her terraforming miracle, GAIA, but there had been mountain sized speed bumps along the way. The largest of which, by unspeakable treachery the witless architect of the End of the World, Ted Faro, had purposefully erased the repository of human knowledge that had been meant to teach these new humans in their new Earth. They had been released into the wild with what amounted to a mere kindergarten education and left to fend for themselves.

In short order, they, and their descendants had devolved into a primitive, tribal state like something out of Lord of the Flies. That made the twelve thousand some odd employees of American Scientific the best educated humans on the planet, but it was a planet full of danger; dangerous machines and dangerous, feral men.

Colonel Travis Murray and his party had returned from Meridian and the Battle of the Alight where the rogue sentient sub-routine of GAIA, HADES had been stopped from destroying this brave, new world. But that didn't mean there wasn't a great deal of survival to do. The Colonel had intended to start back out immediately, to catch up to the Seeker Aloy and assist in her quest to reboot GAIA and take back control of the terraforming system, but there had been many conspiracies to keep that from happening.

While the borders of the land the AmSci tribe, as their neighbors had taken to calling them had been formalized, that land still had to be sown with crops, border markers emplaced, livestock and farm animals raised from stored embryos to full fledged animals and then protected from privation and the terraforming machines themselves.

Not to mention the re-founding of hundreds of new industries.

All of this knowledge and by comparison, wealth, brought out raiders. Banishment was a favorite punishment of this new era of humanity; to be denied the protection of the village wall was practically a death sentence in and of itself. Some, however, learned to thrive in the wilderness. Many of these outcasts banded together into little sub-tribes of bandits and outlaws and it hadn't taken long for news to spread of the new tribe and their mountain city full of treasure beyond the dreams of avarice.

The first dedicated attack had come the night before. A group of forty men, in various, patchwork armors and clothing had charged the still under construction wall at dusk. They ignored both commands to stop and warning shots from Travis' security men wielding AR15s the group had brought with them.

Two of his guards had taken arrow wounds in the defense, one was only just clinging to life, but they had managed to gun down the bandits. Travis had stewed for a long time before he finally had given the order not to bury the bandits, but to have scaffolds erected for the bodies to be tied to and placed at the edge of the AmSci land as a grim warning.

Those coming looking for trouble would find it.

Frank Olmstead had been appalled when he'd heard what his head of security had ordered, but was enough of a leader that he'd only said, “Colonel, can I have a word please?” Frank understood that the most basic tenet of leadership was you never undermine a subordinate's authority in front of their subordinates. Praise and reward were always public affairs, but correction was always done in private.

“Certainly, sir,” Murray had responded and led the way to his new office. The Engine Test Stand which had been a prominent construction at the old facility; a massive thing, five stories tall and made of steel reinforced concrete pillars that were square braced at each 'story.' It made a box, one hundred feet on a side and was one of the few structures outside the blast doors that had survived the intervening thousand years largely intact, had become a bulwark of the new defensive wall that had been built, making the third anchor between the mountainside itself on either side of the blast doors that protected the inner portions of the facility.

Over the years, a massive oak tree had taken root at the base of the stand and, over the centuries, grown up and around it like something out of J. R. R. Tolkien. The remains of the stand and been been enclosed to house the security force and had somewhat whimsically become known as 'The Tree House.' Travis' office, and quarters had been moved out into the Tree House and, as water and sewer piping had been run out to it, he'd finally gotten his private toilet. Now the original wood stockade wall was being replaced by a concrete one as fast as they could manufacture the cement. Once behind the office's closed door, Travis had invited his employer to sit, but he'd chosen to remain standing. “Colonel, I trust I don't have to explain my objection to tying bodies to what amounts to a cross and posting them at our borders, do I?”

Travis sighed and nodded. “Believe me, sir, I find it just as distasteful as you, but these people are still coming to understand the concept of the Rule of Law. Might Makes Right here, and I have to protect our people.”

“Do we even know who these attackers were, or who might take offense at our defense?”

Travis nodded. “According to Nakoa they're a mixed bag of renegades. Outcasts from the Nora, and criminally condemned to banishment former Carja and Oseram. There's evidently a nest of them down in Colorado Springs based out of the old Pioneers Museum, or it's ruin, rather. She assures me we don't have anything to worry about from the Sun King or the Matriarchs of the Nora.”

“What about the Oseram?” Frank asked.

Travis shook his head. “The Claim, which is what they call their territory, is north of the Carja lands, somewhere in what was Wyoming or Idaho. She doesn't think word will even get to them, or that they'll care if it does.”

Frank drew in a breath and sighed. “How are your men?”

“Tom will have a nasty scar, but he'll be fine,” Murray replied stiffly. “Jordi took an arrow to the guts. The doctors give him fifty/fifty odds.”

Frank's expression changed to one of sympathy and reached out to clasp his Chief of Security's shoulder in consolation. “I understand your thinking with this, Travis, but, we're better than that. We have to be.”

“Sir, if we don't show that we will not be fucked with, you're guaranteeing more attacks.”

Olmstead's face became grim. “Colonel, I want you to ride out to Daytower. First, make sure with their garrison commander they won't take offense to what I'm about to order. Nakoa is certain the Matriarchs won't care if we move against the bandits in Colorado Springs?”

“I'll double check, sir, but that's my understanding.”

“Alright. As these people use a different alphabet, I want to get a warning translated into Carja and Oseram lettering. Something suitably dire, I'll leave the specifics to you.”

Travis raised a sardonic eyebrow. “What if I'm too...aggressive, sir?”

Frank looked at the other man askance. “I trust your judgment, Colonel. Once we have their glyphs, I want signs erected that proclaim it and leave the raiders belongings at it. Let people see we don't care what they have, but we'll protect what we have.”

“Yes sir.”

The older man's face became harsh. “Then I want you to take a force to the Pioneer Museum and clean out that nest of thugs.”

The declaration gave Travis a moment of pause. “A...punitive expedition, Frank? Is that..?”

“Wise?” Olmstead asked, then shrugged his own ignorance. “Perhaps not. But you make a valid point; we have to show we won't be fucked with. Do you have better council, Colonel?”

Travis thought for a long moment, then went over to his desk. From the drawer, he took a bottle of Glenlivet he'd packed carefully against the calamity they survived. He was honestly surprised when he'd opened the bottle to find that the source he'd read on the internet proved correct; that the sealed bottle would last indefinitely. Or, at least, the thousand years it had endured. Of course, it had stopped aging when it had been bottled, so it was literally a thousand year old bottle full of twelve year old Scotch. He didn't ask if his employer wanted any, he just poured a pair of drams and presented the other to Frank. “I don't know if I have better council, boss. But I do know that such a raid will eat a lot of ammunition. Ammunition we haven't got a way of replacing easily.”

“We've got, what ten thousand primers?” Frank asked around his first sip.

“Ten thousand each in small, large rifle primers and pistol primers,” He corrected absently. “That said, Boss, bringing someone up to proficiency takes nearly five hundred rounds. We're well stocked with weapons and replacement parts, and the machine shop can manufacture replacements as we need them, but we don't have a powder or primer industry.” Travis took a sip himself and sighed. “You want my honest opinion, Frank? I think we need to investigate this 'Cauldron' ENID found out at Black Mountain. We know some of these machines are being armed with twenty millimeter cannon. I've seen those rounds myself. We've heard that some of the smaller machines have machine guns. If GAIA was using NATO frequencies and NATO standard cannon shells, chances are really good she also was using NATO standard small arms.”

Frank rubbed his chin. “You think you can find them at Black Mountain?”

“I'm going to Daytower anyway,” he replied with a grin. “It's only another two hundred miles, right?”

Olmstead raised his glass. “Have a safe trip, Colonel. When do you leave?”

* * *

“Why am I learning from Buck that we are going to Daytower? And not from my husband?”

Travis winced at Nakoa's voice from behind him as he was packing his saddle bag for the trip. He sighed and stood to turn and face her. She was wearing the denim jeans she'd discovered in central supply that she'd fallen in love with, and Murray had to admit he loved seeing her in them. They did amazing things for her figure, and while Travis was well familiar with her body by this point, there was just something about seeing her legs and ass with a tight layer of blue denim over them that was somehow better than seeing her naked. His former Nora Brave was wearing one of her leather corsets as a top that lifted while presenting her breasts in their best possible light. She had never been particularly busty, but the leather stretched over her skin as it supported her had a similar effect as a push up bra, an effect she delighted in teasing him with. Over the corset she had added one of the skillfully worked wooden bead necklaces the Nora were somewhat famous for, though her hands were on her hips and her expression was one of annoyance. Despite how comfortable she had become with the 'Ancients' as they were known, she still wore the blue 'C' shaped woad marking around her right eye as a kind of memory of her tribal heritage.

“Sweet heart...” he started, but she immediately crossed the room and speared his chest with a finger.

“You were going to sneak off without telling me, weren't you?” she demanded.

“Nakoa...”

“Weren't you?!” she demanded again. Frustrated, he grabbed her shoulders, picked her up and silenced her accusations by kissing her. Instantly her legs wrapped around his waist and her hands grabbed his head to hold him into the kiss as her tongue pressed its way into his mouth to twine with his own. She actually gasped as the kiss parted, but her mild fetish of being manhandled this way was one of the reasons he did it. The other being she wasn't angry any more. “Just because you can turn me on won't let you sneak off into the night!” she declared breathlessly.

“Nakoa, you're pregnant,” he protested, which caused her eyes to roll.

“Yes, I'm pregnant, not an invalid,” she told him, touching the tip of his nose with her finger tip. “Women have been having babies for a very long time on this planet and it hasn't kept most of us from continuing to live life in the meantime. Even Doc says I can't be more than a month and a half along.”

His hands slid down her back to cup her buttocks to be a bit more comfortable as he held her off the floor of their apartment. “Do you think I want to risk...?” This time she silenced him by leaning forward and kissing him. It was uncharacteristically gentle of her, especially after this particular gambit he'd played. Normally, picking her up like this would start a serious lovemaking session that would rise to anyone's level of intense cardio work out.

“What risk?” she asked softly as their lips parted again. “I won't even start to show before New Years. That's plenty of time for us to go out, do this mission and be home before the worst of the winter sets in.” She laid her forehead on his and her hazel eyes stared into his blue ones. “Besides, you need me out with you.”

“Olara...” he started, but she puckered up her lips and looked at him askance.

“Oh, so Buck can have Olara at his side, but I have to sit and wait and worry while you're gone? And what will that do to my pregnancy?”

He frowned at her. “That's dirty pool,” he objected. “And who taught you to be so emotionally manipulative?”

Her grin became impish. “You think I haven't learned by watching you and all the other AmSci in my time here? I see what your women use on their men, what works and what doesn't, and I know you very well indeed!” She reached up and ran her hand through his short hair. “Now, you know you won't sneak away in the night. Are you just going to accept it and let us enjoy our last night at home, or do you want to have a fight?”

“What good would that do me?” he wanted to know. “You win all our fights.”

The impish grin spread from ear to ear. “He can be taught!” She unlocked her ankles from around his back causing him to gently return her to her feet. “Come, while we pack you can tell me why we are going to Daytower and then...” She bent over at the waist to pick up her saddle bag from under their bed, grinning over her shoulder at him as she did so. He playfully slapped the ass she had presented him with, making her wink at him. “Mmm, I do love it when you're forceful!”

“Shameless!” he accused her, making her shrug her indifference.

She tossed her saddle bag on the bed next to his and made a broad gesture. “Are you complaining, father of my child? I didn't think so!” she quickly added before he could answer. “So, why are we going to Daytower?”

“Frank wants a warning sign to post on the road approaches to Fort Carson,” he told her as he crossed the room to their wardrobe and took out his war belt to check it's pouches for missing items. “We'll need samples of Carja and Oseram glyphs so it can be read locally. Something along the lines of, 'Come in Peace, or leave in pieces, if we let you leave.'”

She took her favorite bow from it's pegs on the wall and quickly strung it to test the string and bow for defect. “Frank Olmstead said that?” she demanded. She plucked the bowstring and it's thrum filled the room like a musical instrument.

“No, I did,” he corrected her as he made a mental check list of the war belt's items laid out on the bed and, once he was sure nothing was missing, began to repack them. “He said, 'I trust your judgment,' when I asked him what he wanted the sign to say. What he did say was he wanted me to take a force down to Colorado Springs and clear out that bandit camp.”

That gave her pause and she sat down the bow to come and face him. “There are a lot of bandits in that camp, husband. We will lose people, even with your weapons...”

“I raised that objection,” he reassured her. “In addition to the drain of expendables as well as people. So, he authorized me to go up to that Cauldron ENID found and see if GAIA makes ammunition our rifles can eat.”

She raised an eyebrow at him. “There are easier ways than that,” she replied. At his questioning look, she spread her hands as if she was surprised her thought hadn't occurred to him. “There are other machines than Thunderjaw's that have distance weapons. We can track and hunt a Stalker for it's dart gun or mine launcher and you can see if it is the same. No sense going all the way to Black Mountain if we don't need to, right?”

He grinned at her and drew her into his arms. “I do love you, you know?”

“I know,” she assured him. “Now, come show me,” she invited as she swept their bed clear of bags.

* * *

September 17th, 3040

Thursday dawned overcast as Travis and Nakoa left the Tree House to cross the courtyard it's wall created between it and the mountain. Along the far wall was a corral that the Striders that were the first machines the Ancients had managed to hack were kept. “Black Jack!” he called, and immediately the artificial horse with 2121 painted on left hip raised it's head and trotted over to the gate of the corral.

Next to him, Nakoa whistled a shrill call and immediately Snow Flake, her Strider turned from it's trough and trotted over to stand next to Black Jack. Nakoa had extensively painted the Strider in a bold white wash, giving the Strider it's name, then swirling, almost Celtic designs in blue the Nora favored. Behind them, thunder rumbled, causing Travis to turn and behold a massive, super cell out over the plains of what had been lower Colorado and Kansas. “Look at that,” he amazed, drawing his wife's gaze. “Have you ever seen a storm like that?”

Travis knew his wife enough to hear fear in her otherwise carefree voice. “No,” she replied, exchanging a glance with him. “Should we delay...?”

“We may not have a choice,” he admitted, but they continued over to the Striders. Buck and Olara were already there, securing their own bags as they did so.

“Morning, Boss,” Buck called with a wave at their approach. “Sorry if I got you in Dutch with the Mrs.”

“He's not complaining,” Nakoa shot back, proving her hearing was still quite remarkable.

Travis indulged in rolling his eyes where his wife couldn't see, while Buck was careful to keep his snicker to himself. “No worries, Buck,” he commented. “The boys get the grist taken care of?”

The question instantly sobered the larger man and he gave a vague gesture to the saddle between this mountainside and the one adjacent to it. “Yes sir. The bodies were stripped, then we took them over to the burn pit. What was...left...was bulldozed over, well clear of the water shed.”

“Buck, there's probably a lot more of that kind of work in our future.”

Simpson shrugged his broad shoulders and ran a hand over his bald head. “At least we've got a future, Boss. No shortage of stupid in our time; it's only natural they'd be well stocked with it here.” He sighed and put his back to the pit and its memory and waved at the blast doors. “I had Jenkins lock the effects up in the old office until we get this sign the Old Man wants.”

“Doc on her way?”

Buck pointed. “Here she comes.”

“Good, if we ride hard, we might get to Daytower before that storm hits. I'd rather weather it under a stone roof than a tent.” In short order, the little group had their rides prepared and were trotting out the gate down the track that had been worn into the bank of the creek that had once been the access road to the facility.

The wind began to pick up by the time they'd arrived at the remains of the old US Highway 24. They were able to pick up speed as the road was in relatively good shape, but it seemed the faster they could canter, the worse the weather became. The sky was dark and angry, lit by bolts of lightning down on the plains, but the storm was quickly drawing close to the mountains. Just as Travis was thinking to up the pace to try and beat the storm with a last, hard push, Nakoa sharply drew in Snow Flake and raised a fist.

Immediately the group came to a halt, and Travis touched his Focus, but it's augmented reality failed to pickup whatever his sharp eyed wife had seen. “What...?” he started, but her attention was fixed ahead and she sharply gestured for silence. Finally, by feel, she selected an arrow from her quiver and laid it over her bow. It was one of the odder weapons the Nora had come up with; that she called a 'Tearblast arrow'. It had a two pronged broad head that she honed to a razor edge with a small battery at the back end, wired to the prongs. When they sank into a machine, it completed the circuit, setting off a paste explosive, strapped to the shaft, behind the head. With a well placed shot, it would blow off a machine's armor plates, exposing vulnerable spots underneath.

After she'd nocked it, she pointed at her eyes, then down at the arrow and finally off in the direction she'd been intently staring at. Travis slowly got his AR15 off it's sling and up to his shoulder, his eyes looking in the direction she had been, but he saw nothing. He clicked the safety off right as she drew and released the arrow. It streaked right across his vision and embedded into something right before the base of the tree he'd been looking at.

There was a flash of a small explosion, which set flying a piece of armor plate and suddenly there was a panther like machine that was reeling from the hit of the arrow. Travis pulled the trigger, causing the rifle to bark, once, twice and a third time before the machine fell over in a shower of sparks. “Damn, I didn't even see that thing through my Focus!” Buck declared.

“Stalker,” Olara informed them. “They have a way to blend in with their surroundings. Almost invisible.”

“Damn good camouflage,” Murray admitted as they trotted over to the machine. They slid off the mechanical horses and poked around the wreck.

“This is the dart gun,” Nakoa said with a slap of the part.

“Son of bitch,” Buck muttered as he got over to it and began to manipulate it. “Are you seeing this, Colonel? It's a damn SAW.”

Olara watched her man open up the machine's weapon like he'd handled them before. “What is a SAW?” she asked. “Other than the wood working tool?”

He didn't look up from his work until he had the thing open, revealing the darts, linked together under the protective cover. “It means Squad Automatic Weapon,” he told her. He clipped two of the darts off and held them and their links up. “Colonel, I do believe we're in business. Tell me that's not M193 on M27 disintegrating links.” He tossed the darts to Travis who removed the magazine from his rifle and compared the two cartridges. “Jesus, it's even got FN roll marks on the receiver!”

“What does that mean?” asked Nakoa. “M what?”

Travis compared the dart to the cartridge in his magazine. “Everything in the Army had a letter number combination to 'name' it. M193 was a specification for a variety of these bullets. It described the bullet weight, the powder load and the cartridge size. M27 means these things, they link the cartridges together in what was called a belt.”

“This,” Buck added, holding aloft the belt he had stripped from the wreck. Travis cleared the cartridges from the links and snapped them into the magazine.

“Let's see how this works,” he declared after he'd stripped the round from the chamber and seated one taken from the Stalker. “The bolt is in battery,” he commented after a glance at the ejection port before he shouldered it. “Fire in the hole!”

The AR barked twice as the two rounds he'd gotten from Buck were flawlessly fired, extracted, fed, fired again and extracted again without incident. With a grin, he tapped his Focus. “ENID?”

The holographic interface of the company's AI, that of a twenty something young woman in a complicated hair style appeared before him. “What can I do for you, Colonel?”

“Put me in touch with Frank, please,” Travis instructed her. “We have good news already.”

* * *

The rain had begun to fall just before they reached Daytower, causing everyone to dig out ponchos against the spatter of the weather which, now that it had started, was quickly building up. The guards only waved them through the open gates as the AmSci rode past, now used to such things from their closest neighbor, giving them access to the bailey of the fortress. They were more concerned about staying dry at their posts than humans riding machines. The Striders themselves were weather proofed and stood without complaint in the down pour as their riders dismounted and ambled into the Inn that was a central part of the fortification that was farthest east of the Carja Sundom.

Hanging up the rain gear to dry by the fire, they sat at an empty table, glad to be indoors as the wind outside began to howl. The innkeeper brought over pitcher of beer and mugs, promising food in a moment, before he withdrew. Despite the weather, Travis was in a fine mood. The Stalker had produced a SAW and four hundred belted rounds of ammo in addition to a complicated looking launcher that was roughly designed around a forty millimeter Mark 47 Striker system, but lacked the manual controls. It had been installed in a micro turret with a set of air burst smart grenades and, interestingly white smoke grenades, a dozen of each with a selective feed system that would let the machine pick between them. Both weapons, and the Stalker's robot brain had been removed for study, the brain already downloaded and beam cast back to the AmSci's tech genius Ian Turner to begin work on hacking this type of machine.

After a long drink of the beer, Buck quietly asked Travis, “Any idea why GAIA would stamp ID marks on the receiver of a company that hasn't existed in a thousand years?”

“On a guess?” he replied, taking a drink himself. “That was on the specification design sheet she had access to. She didn't bother to think about why, all she knew was that was the blue print to follow, so she followed it.”

Nakoa leaned in to be discrete. “But, we didn't start seeing Stalkers and Sawtooths and the other hunter killer machines until after the Derangement, twenty years ago. GAIA had blown herself up by then.”

“Something is making new machines at these Cauldrons,” Doc added. “And since they're new, it's something with purpose.”

Travis rubbed his chin in thought. “We know that the HADES sub-routine gained sentience from GAIA's last transmission. And she did say that it had affected all of her other sub-routines.” He paused for a moment, then snapped his fingers. “ENID sent me a recording at the celebration at Meridian after the Battle of the Alight. One of the people in it was Margo Shen, which ENID said was the 'Alpha' of the HEPHAESTUS Sub-routine. Hephaestus was the Greek god of blacksmiths, it is probably the architect of these new machines.”

“And it evidently had access to DOD databases and the patent office before Doomsday,” Buck remarked darkly. “Or GAIA did and HEPHAESTUS took the records as a parting gift. Either way it's the same thing. So now we know these 'Cauldrons' are making M193, twenty mike mike and forty mill grenades. Wonder what other toys HEPHAESTUS has been playing with?”

“Colonel Murray?”

Travis looked up to take in the broad face and some what muddled ancestry that belonged to the commander of this, the furthest east of Carja outposts. In the six months since Travis saw him last added miles to his vaguely Asian features and there was more gray in his dark top knot than Travis remembered. “Captain Balahn!” he greeted, rising to take the Captain's hand in greeting. “Won't you join us?”

The Captain shook his head and there was genuine regret on his face as he did so. “Not while I'm on duty,” he replied and gestured at a woman standing next to him that shared enough of his features that it was possible they were related. She stood boldly, in an silk outfit made of a combination slash sleeved doublet and bolero jacket of dull yellow over deep red with white and gray armor pieces over the silk for protection. Interestingly, she wore pants and sturdy looking boots in place of a dress or skirt and across her chest she wore three leather pouches that looked like a STANAG chest rig that a Special Forces Operator from Travis' own time might have sported. Her black hair was cut short, off her collar and above her ears, but fuller on top and tied back with a red head band with three additional machine armor pieces like a tiara. Around her eyes were the lined makeup pencil marks that went to circles at her temples that the Carja favored though the meaning of the variations was lost on Travis. “This is Resolved Furahni,” Balahn declared by way of introduction. “She has been dispatched by the Sun King to seek out your people, you specifically.”

“I'm honored,” Travis declared, taking the hand she offered.

“Likewise,” Furahni told him. She had a clear, unambiguous voice, of full grown woman, none of the modest low tones and averted eyes that had been Travis' experience with other Carja women. She considered herself an equal to everyone she met and it showed. “And glad you happened to be here. I wasn't looking forward to the walk between here and Devil's Thirst. I understand it's infested with Bandits.”

Travis chuckled darkly. “Not for long. In fact, Captain, I had intended to stop by your office once the weather cleared. My Chief Frank wants to be sure His Radiance won't take offense when we move against these bandits.”

Balahn's face brightened. “By all means, do what you will!” he declared. “Those criminals have no loyalty or place with us. They were tried and sentenced, so their fate is sealed in our eyes. May the Sun curse their eyes! We have no objection.”

“And, what is your opinion of the Oseram on the matter?” Travis asked him. Balahn snorted and made a dismissive gesture.

“They will be more concerned their ale mug is in want of a refill.”

“Good to know,” Travis replied and then turned his attention to Furahni. “What can I do for you, Resolved Furahni?” He gestured at their table again. “Won't you join us?”

Her serious expression brightened a little and she took a chair from the near by table and added it to make a place for herself with the AmSci. Once Travis was settled, and he noted, she made sure the Captain was beyond earshot before she turned her attention to the table. With a brief glance at the others, she fixed her gaze back on Travis. “May I speak freely in confidence?”

“You need have no fear of loose lips here,” Murray replied, and she leaned in and kept her tone low.

“I am sent to you by way of Blameless Marad on the authority of the Sun King,” she declared, opening one of the pouches on her chest and removing a document she handed across the table. Travis opened it, finding it in the flowing gliphs of the Carja, and thus unreadable, though the heavy wax seal that hung from the document was quite impressive. “I had returned from an embassy of the Sun King to the Banuk tribe, north of here, in The Cut.”

“Banuk?” asked Doc. “The Cut?”

Furahni nodded. “A mute, stubborn people; tight as a closed fist and caring only for survival. Their land is a wide valley dotted with hot springs with boiling water and steam that erupts from the ground through vents, lined with yellow minerals and the stench of rotten eggs.”

“Sounds like the Yellowstone Caldera,” Buck mused to himself. Furahni shrugged her indifference.

“I was sent as a part of Avad's continued diplomatic efforts to make amends for the Red Raids with the people who share our borders.”

“Admirable,” Olara declared. “To become friends with the Banuk is no small feat.”

The Carja woman laughed without mirth. “Oh, I made no friends, believe me. But I have all of my limbs and my life, so there is that success in failure I suppose.”

“You'll have to forgive me,” Travis told her. “Alas, my people do not use these modern gliphs, so I'm afraid this is a closed book to me,” he said, returning the document to her. “In fact, one of the reasons I am here is to retain a Carja Scholar to transcribe a sign for our borders.”

“The bandits?” she guess and he nodded grimly. “Whenever you like, I can write out your sign in both Carja and Oseram gliphs, though I'll have to defer to your women as far as the Nora goes. I don't know their writings.”

“I'm grateful,” Travis assured her. “Now, what can I do for Blameless Marad?”

Her demeanor became grave again. “On the Summer Solstice there was an...incident...on the Alight. For a brief moment a red light came from the sphere that the Metal Devil HADES occupied, then it rose up the Spire and flashed away to the west.”

“You saw this?” demanded Buck.

Furahni shook her head. “No, I was still in The Cut. A messenger from Blameless Marad sent me this commission,” and she gestured at the document on the table, “and charged me to come here with all haste to seek out this new tribe, AmSci and their Colonel Travis Murray, favored of the Sun King. It is said you and your people are knowledgeable of such things. I saw the Striders awaiting you outside. The Sun King has charged Marad to discover what the meaning of this event was and he sends for you.” She paused long enough for the Innkeeper to present her with a mug of beer and set a loaf of bread with oil and herbs on the table. “I understand such a journey has it's dangers and hardships. I am authorized to promise tribute and treasure sufficient to make the journey, and your aid, worth your whiles.”

Travis pulled at his chin as he thought for a long moment, then finally looked up. “I'll have to discuss this with my chief.”

She sighed. “So we journey back to Devil's Thirst before we may travel west?”

“No,” Travis replied. “I can speak to him from here. Once I have my orders, you'll have your answer.”

The woman's face pulled into an expression of disbelief, then awe when she realized Travis wasn't boasting. “I see Blameless Marad was right to call for you, then.” Murray smiled and tapped his Focus as he turned the document back to her.

“Could I trouble you to read this out, pointing at each word?”

“Why?”

“I wish to learn your manner of writing,” he told her. “If you'll indulge me.”

She shrugged and read aloud while her finger moved across the page. The Carja, at least, also aligned their documents top to bottom, left to right, which he found interesting. “Be it known,” she read. “By Order of the 14th Sun King, Avad, by the Hand of Blameless Marad, Hunter Furahni is raised to the rank of Resolved and is charged to act as Our Voice to the AmSci Tribe in specific to Colonel Travis Murray, that she may open his eyes to the secret the bearer of this charge shall speak, and to treat for pains of travel and any inconvenience as may arise that the Colonel, and such lieutenants as he deems worthy shall lay aside all other matters to come at once to Meridian to assist in our understanding of this secret. Signed in the light of the Sun by the Hand of Blameless Marad on the Solstice of the twelfth year in the reign of Avad, 14th Sun King of the Carja.”

“Thank you,” he told her as the Focus chewed on the symbols, numerically comparing them with the American English it knew, then holographically overlaid the document in English. He touched it again, then stood. “Please excuse me for a moment. I'll have a word with my chief, and let you know his will.” Furahni nodded as Travis stood and left the common room of the Inn, seeking a quiet corner which he found. “ENID?” he asked as he touched it again. “Would you connect me with Frank, please? It's urgent.”

“Certainly, Colonel. One moment.”

The light from the Focus flared and a life size image of Frank appeared in the little alcove Travis had secreted himself into. Olmstead was leaning on something, probably his desk and his expression was one of pleasure. “Colonel! Yet more good news? I should send you out more often!”

Travis chuckled darkly and shook his head. “Boss, we've got a problem. I'm here safe at the Inn of Daytower, all hands present, but we've run into an Emissary of the Sun King. He's requesting, forcefully, mind you, but requesting me and whoever else I deem ok to come out to Meridian.”

Frank frowned. “Meridian? What for?”

“It seems, at the solstice, a red light rose up from the processing orb that housed HADES and shot off to the West.”

Olmstead was aghast. “That psychopathic AI is loose?” he demanded. “I thought we stopped him six months ago!”

“That's the going agreement,” Murray agreed with him. “Evidence seems to imply there's a wrinkle. I'm not sure HADES actually made good his escape, other wise it seems like we'd be dead by now. But we can't rule that out from here, either. I want your approval to follow our Emissary back out to Meridian and find out what's going on.”

Frank only thought for a moment. “Absolutely, Colonel. And with the Focus network Ian and ENID have set up, I want you to stay in touch.”

“Will do, sir.”

“Godspeed, Travis,” Frank wished him. “And watch your six.”

“Roger that, skipper.”

* * *

The storm howled all night, working itself up into a frenzy that Travis watched from the sheltered balcony of the Inn where he and his party were spending the night. True to her word, Resolved Furahni had written out the sign he dictated to her in both Carja and Oseram gliphs. The Colonel had made sure to include words in the warning that had every sound in English so, it was hoped, the Focus would be able to store and translate when needed.

Ian had been contacted, via Focus to receive the translation as well as a request for a Strider to be sent to Daytower for Furahni so she could keep the pace the party would set. Though the machine, and a Focus to control it, wouldn't be here until morning. Now, Travis drank coffee and watched the storm through the flashes of lightning, which were frequent, nearly unnaturally so. His Focus picked up a quartet of Storm Birds that seemed to be trying to mitigate or augment the storm, the difference was hard to tell. Though when one was struck by lightning six times in rapid succession, and crashed, the others evidently decided discretion was the better part of valor and flew off. “Quite a storm,” Nakoa observed as she joined him on the balcony and slid her free arm around his waist. Without thinking about it, he draped his arm over her shoulders to protect her from the chill in the air. “Glad we're not out in it.”

“Mmmm,” he replied around his sip, then offered her the metal canteen cup that she happily accepted and sipped from. The Nora Brave had quickly become fond of coffee and savored it as the metal cup warmed her hands. “This is unusual for the Denver area from my time. I'd be more concerned with snow storms rather than super cell thunderstorms like this.”

“I've not seen anything like it either,” she admitted, at least, not when I was a little girl, though for the three years I walked the war path to avenge my father, I remember the weather seemed to get a bit worse each year. Perhaps this is another problem caused by the lack of GAIA managing the terraforming system?”

“There's a cheerful thought,” he muttered. “Well, we'll hope it breaks by the morning, but even if not, we'll be dry enough in the Eisenhower Tunnel, and the storm won't make it over the Rockies to give us trouble on the other side into Meridian.”

She handed him back his canteen cup, minus a good portion of the coffee and favored him with a salacious grin. “We have that wonderful Carja bed and this private room, it would be a shame not to put it to good use,” she opined, her tone dripping innuendo.

“I've married a sex fiend!” he teased her and she arched an eyebrow at him in response.

“I know my husband isn't complaining,” she accused him. “Besides, the deed is already done and I'm gone with child. Why not take advantage?”

He finished off the cup and flung the last drops out the balcony. “I can't argue with your logic, my dear.”

“I thought not,” she purred.

* * *
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Journey Into The Forbidden West Part 2

Author: 

  • E. E. Nalley

Caution: 

  • CAUTION: Language
  • CAUTION: Violence

Audience Rating: 

  • Mature Subjects (pg15)

Publication: 

  • Novel Chapter

Genre: 

  • Science Fiction
  • Adventure

Character Age: 

  • College / Twenties
  • Mature / Thirty+

Permission: 

  • Posted by author(s)
Journey Cover FINAL.png
Journey Into the Forbidden West
by
E. E. Nalley

A thousand years after the end of the world...

September 18th, 3040

By dawn the raging storm was spent down to just an annoying soaking rain, the kind that would likely last all day, but it was better than the frequent lightening strikes and just barely not gale force winds of the previous evening. Travis was up with the dawn, which was his custom, and as he was looking out over the balcony, enjoying his morning coffee, he saw the arrival of the new Strider that had been dispatched. The guards at the gate, were more than a bit vexed by it trotting up by itself, then displaying a hologram of Travis himself, but shying away when ever one of the guards approached it.

“It's ok,” he shouted to them. “It's with me.”

The guards exchanged a look, then went back to their post shelters and the Strider trotted over to the inn and joined the line of the other machine horses awaiting their humans from inside. That accomplished, Travis took his cup with him and wandered down stairs and out to the little porch on the inn that the Striders stood before. “Identify,” he ordered the machine, which stared at him with it's blue light and camera combination, gave an exaggerated nod, then dipped it's head into the 'stand by' posture the other machines had adopted. He took the saddle bag off it's rear hips and went back in side.

The innkeeper and his family were all up, his wife and daughters busy making bread while his two sons were putting the wooden chairs back down on the floor from where they'd been stacked on the tables the night before. “Breakfast, Colonel?” the elder asked him and he nodded.

“Would you do me a kindness and wake Resolved Furahni and inform her I await her pleasure in the main room?”

“Certainly, sir,” the boy replied as he dipped his head and headed to the main stairwell as his father walked over, wiping his hands on his apron.

“You've a lovely family,” Travis complimented which the Innkeeper beamed at.

“My thanks, sir. We appreciate having you as our guests.” He gave the cup in the other man's hand a glance. “Ale?”

“Oh no,” Travis chuckled. “Much too early for me. I'm happy with my coffee, thanks.”

“Coffee?” the other man asked, genuinely curious.

Travis nodded as he sat down at the table and invited the Innkeeper to join him. “It's an Ancient beverage, made from the stones of a berry that originally grew on a bush, thousands of miles from here, across a great water called the Atlantic Ocean. The pit of the berry is roasted then ground into a powder of varying degrees of course or fineness, then hot water is passed through the grounds.” He held up his mug. “Would you care to try some? Though I warn you it's an acquired taste.”

The Innkeeper smiled and shook his head. “No sense acquiring a taste for something that can't be traded in.”

Travis smiled faintly. “Oh, my people are obsessed with it. I imagine there'll be a brisk trade in a few years.”

“You have seedlings of these bushes from across this, what did you call it? Ocean?”

“Seeds, yes, and they were planted earlier this year,” he replied. “Some of many we brought with us. Though they won't mature for a few years yet. I'll bring you some when they have.”

“Very generous,” the Innkeeper complimented. “I'll look forward to it.” His son came down the stairs and waved at Travis.

“She says she'll be with you presently, Colonel.”

“Thank you, young man.”

“And I'll have your breakfast presently,” his father commented as he tipped the cap he wasn't wearing and trod back into his kitchen. Travis opened the saddle bag to find the Focus in a protective case as well as several letters, one of which was actually in the Carja Script. Travis tapped his Focus and immediately a ghostly translation appeared over it.

Greetings to His Radiance, Avad, 14th Sun King of the Carja

By the Hand of our Trusty Emissary, Colonel Travis Murray, I am pleased to salute His Radiance for
his generous offers and delighted to be of aid in this request for assistance in this most dire of circumstances.
I am sure Your Radiance is as concerned as I am that the threat to all Humanity, HADES, may be loosed again.

I humbly ask that any and all aid be given to Colonel Murray and his party so that this threat to all of us may be
swiftly dealt with. In aide there of, I have included, as a gift to His Radiance, a Focus that will allow for more swift
communications in times of crisis like this one. Enclosed with this letter is a brief summary of how to use the
device, for Your Radiance to review at leisure.

Further, I have instructed Colonel Murray to present to Your Radiance the gift of this Strider at the end of its
need for your agent, Resolved Furahni with our compliments and as a show of friendship and mutual assistance
between the Carja and the employees of American Scientific.

Yours Very Respectfully,
Franklin Olmstead, Chief Executive Officer
American Scientific, Inc.

Travis laughed to himself at his boss's brilliance and mentally tipped his hat to the canny play he was making. Just because you were the strongest kid on the block, didn't make you a match for all the other kids, and it never hurt to be friends with the most popular kid. “That's why he's a CEO and you're just Head of Security,” he told himself softly as he found and put the instruction manual to the Focus with the letter to the king.

There was a letter to him, which he recognized as Ian's handwriting, informing him the storm the previous evening had brought a Stormbird close enough to Fort Carson that he was actually able to over ride it. Unlike the Striders, there wasn't accommodation for human use of the mechanical bird, which was constructed with what seemed an odd mishmash of competing objectives. There were dispersion tanks on either flank that seemed to have been designed for dispersing cloud seeding chemicals, even super cooled materials like dry ice. Which made sense for it's origin as a terraforming robot for GAIA. However, it was obvious HEPHAESTUS had been tinkering with the design. There was a crude kind of directed energy weapon that was an ionizing LASER with a static electricity generator to create an arc of lightening that would generally, but not precisely follow the ionizing path of the LASER. As well as the reports of the Nora who had joined the AmSci that the Stormbird was fond of using those super cooled fluids as a strafing weapon.

Fortunately, the override had worked perfectly and if nothing else, the Stormbird would make a great semi-armed drone, though at least one of the shop boys were lobbying to try and fit a saddle to the damn thing. Somebody seemed to have a death wish.

Travis tisked his teeth at the risk Frank had allowed their tech genius to take, but success covered a multitude of sins as the saying went.

It was then that Resolved Furahni came down the stairs, looking remarkably alert and well rested. Travis wondered how often she got to actually sleep in a bed as she nodded her good morning and sat down with him at the table. “Good Marrow,” she greeted as she gave the Innkeeper's son a wave to request a beverage. “You wanted to see me?”

“Good morning,” Travis replied, and slid the letter to the Sun King to where she could read it. “You'll be using this until we get back to Meridian so you can keep up. I'll apologize ahead of time about the jostling you'll get riding a Strider. You'll want to familiarize yourself with the Focus and how to use it.”

“Ah, so that's what those things are I see you and the Savior wear.”

“Savior?” asked Travis.

“The Seeker, Alloy. She's been affirmed by Sun King Avad as the Savior of Meridian,” Furahni informed him. She took the device from the protection of it's box and held it up. “It's strange so small a thing can do all I read in this paper.”

“The joys of miniaturization,” Travis replied.

“And it can command all machines?”

“No,” Murray corrected quickly. “It's predominately a communications device, allowing people to see and hear each other across great distances. The Strider was overridden back at Fort Carson, then...tied would be the best word, to that Focus. But, of itself, it can't tie other machines.”

“I see,” the other nodded. “Interesting.” She held it up to her right temple as she saw how Travis and the others had worn theirs and was surprised to find it staying their of it's own accord. She looked around, somewhat amazed. “What are all these lights I see?”

“The Focus has a mode we called 'Augmented Reality', where it could see where you were looking, based on the position of your eyes and identify things to bring them to your attention. This particular Focus has our standard information built into it, so you'll find it highlights things that for you would be mundane. You can lower the augmentation to 'Threat' level and it will highlight machines it senses.”

Furahni chuckled and shook her head. “No wonder Aloy was the legendary huntress she's become. With this, anyone could be!” She accepted the mug the Innkeeper brought her and took a sip in gratitude. “So, Colonel, it's a week's walk from Day Tower to Meridian. How much faster with these Striders you command?”

“Two days,” Murray told her. “Though if pressed we could probably cut that down to a bit over a day, but as a new rider I wouldn't recommend that pace.”

The Carja woman was suitably impressed. “What a time I've lived to see.”

“Amen,” Travis echoed.

* * *

September 20th, 3040

After two uncomfortable days of trotting along the remains of I70, the party climbed out of Lone Light and into the foot hills around Eagle Canyon and the mesas upon which, Meridian, the Capital of the Sundom was perched. Interestingly, this time the road took them up the rim of the canyon and after rounding a higher mesa, the city and it's main bridge came into view. It was still an impressive sight, even with the scars of the battle with HADES still on it.

Most of the rubble had been cleared and it was obvious crops had been quickly planted, though many of the buildings still showed signs of repair and want of it. The sergeant of the guard had been one of the palace soldiers who had defended the Sun King's Palace under Travis' command and remembered the Ancient. A runner was dispatched ahead and the sergeant escorted the group through the city towards the palace, pointing out all the repairs as they passed them.

By the time the party had reached the palace, the swarthy face of Blameless Marad was waiting for them in his silk suit, a well practiced grin of welcome on his face. “Colonel! Welcome once again to the Sundom. I'm pleased to see Resolved Furahni was able to find you.”

“As luck would have it, Marad, we happened to be in Day Tower, I wanted to consult with Captain Balahn before my people moved against a bandit camp in Devil's Thirst. We didn't want to insult the Sun King by taking action.”

Marad was well pleased and his smile became wider. “That's most considerate of you. Please, feel free to defend your boarders against these bandits, if Balahn did not make that clear. I'm afraid I have you here on much more troubling news.”

“So I hear,” Travis replied. “What's happened?”

The Carja Spy Master looked about at the normal citizens goings and comings near the Palace gate, then back up Travis. “Much,” he declared softly. “But, that's a discussion we should have behind closed doors and away from prying ears. This way.” The group was led into a small garden that was large enough to contain the Striders, then briskly led down and across the small valley between the palace and the Alight where the multi-band broadcast tower of Station Minerva was standing.

The machines Alloy and the other Nora had defeated at the battle were still in the process of being scrapped and the ceremonial buildings that had been damaged in the battle were being repaired, but in the center of the colonnade, on a three meter pedestal made to resemble the broadcast tower stood a statue of the Nora huntress Aloy. The sculptor had captured the fierce Nora girl's likeness well, standing with one foot on a rock, spear in hand and her bow at her back, staring off to the south, the tower to her left.

As soon as she laid eyes on it, Nakoa snickered and failed to keep her amusement to herself. “Oh just wait till Aloy sees this!” she managed around her mirth, making their host, Marad, uncomfortable.

“She...modestly...complained she felt her task unfinished and therefor was unworthy of the honor,” he admitted tactfully. “The Sun King, however, insisted. Here we are,” he gestured at the shattered processing orb, still at the base of the tower. “As I understand it from the Savior when she arrived...”

“Aloy has been here already?” Travis asked.

Marad nodded. “I apologize that the speed of word was not swift enough to save you the journey. In fact, she left this morning. But, what we learned was the Devil HADES somehow escaped the orb and was headed west. The Savior climbed the tower and spoke with someone, a Banuk Shaman named Sylens as I understand it. It was evidently he who engineered the Devil's escape.”

“Where did Aloy go?” Nakoa demanded.

“West,” Marad replied. “We have an embassy about to occur between our furthest outpost, Barren Light, and the savage clan that lives beyond, the Tenakth.”

Travis was immediately concerned. “Savage?”

Marad was somewhat chagrined. “It's called the Forbidden West for a reason. Even before the Red Raids, the Ninth Sun King, Ranan sought to expand the Sundom to the west. We were fought by a collation of four tribes, the more peaceful Utaru, they live in the boarder lands between Barren Light and the lands of the Tenakth. They're skilled farmers for the most part, we learned a considerable amount of our own knowledge of the Farming Trade from them. The other three tribes Lowlanders, Desert and Sky Clans remained united and call themselves jointly the Tenakth. They're a violent, war like people who take tribute of food from the Utaru in exchange for protecting them from the Sundom.”

“Sounds like a new Sparta,” Buck mused to himself. At the Spy Master's inquisitive glance, he elaborated, “An Ancient tribe, ancient even in our time, that consisted of fanatical warriors who trained constantly, becoming legendary soldiers from ancient history.”

“If your Spartans were half as vicious as the Tenakth they would be formidable indeed,” Marad agreed. In his madness, Avad's father sought again to try and conquer the west for additional sacrifices during the Red Raids. We discovered the Tenakth were every bit as fearsome as their legends from Ranan's time warned.”

“And you let Aloy ride out into these killers?” Doc demanded. Marad sighed with long suffering.

“One does not allow, or hinder the Savior if she does not wish to be hindered,” he told her. “However, the Embassy is part of Avad's peace overtures with the Tenakth. Their current Chieftain, Hekarro, has agreed to exchanges of prisoners, kept by the Tenakth after the Red Raids in exchange for tribute from the Sun King. Avad's cousin, Unyielding Fashav the highest born of the captives, is due to be exchanged at this Embassy. If there is a time where Aloy could be granted safe passage through their lands, it is then.”

“When is this Embassy?” asked Travis.

“In a few weeks,” Marad told him. “It's a long walk to Barren Light, if you're going, more than a fortnight on foot, though, with your Striders, I imagine you can make better time. In fact, you'll have company on the journey, should you choose to follow her.”

The Colonel frowned. “Company?”

“The Nora War Chief's son, Varl,” the Carja replied. “He arrived with Aloy yesterday. She went up into the Spire, informed us of what she'd learned, and for whatever reason, left without him. He's provisioning right now to chase her.”

“Can you get him word we're going that way?” Travis asked.

The Spy Master gestured at a soldier who took off at a run. “Done.”

“Buck, see if you can interface your Focus with the tower. Maybe it made a recording of whatever Aloy witnessed. It would be good to have solid information.” The big man nodded.

“You got it, boss.”

Turning back to the Carja, Travis continued, “Blameless, I have a gift for the Sun King, though your agent Furahni is using it currently, a Focus and Strider.”

The other man's eye brows ascended his forehead. “Most Generous, Colonel! Though, I sense some hesitation in your tone?”

“It depends on if you want Furahni to accompany us,” Murray replied. “She'll need to keep using both so she can keep up.”

“I see your point,” Marad declared in a very cagey tone of voice. “Yes, I think it would benefit you to have Resolved Furahni and her knowledge with you. If the Sun King's gift is delayed, I doubt he'll miss what he isn't informed of.”

Travis nodded, filing away the Spy Master's guile for future reference. “I thought you'd think so.”

“Boss,” Buck declared as he ambled up. “You're gonna want to see this.” He touched his Focus and immediately a tiny ghostly Aloy appeared with another man who was evidently communicating with her by the Focus he was wearing. He was an older man of African descent, completely bald and dressed in a tunic of fur and homespun cloth with a metal bandoleer that held a large, rectangular bag at his buttocks behind him. Though it was the blue threads of what appeared to be machine parts implanted into his skin at various places that was truly off putting in a way that it was not obvious if it was some kind of human/machine interface or merely tribal ritual scarification. His hands were clasped behind his back and his tone and bearing dripped with sarcasm and smug superiority.

“Well, Aloy,” he greeted with a small smile. “I see you finally figured it out. To be honest, I'm surprised it took you so long to discover my ruse.”

For her part, the Seeker was disgusted. “You rigged the lance you give me to steal HADES? How could you be so reckless?”

“Reckless?” the other demanded. “You're the one who wanted to purge HADES before it's precious knowledge could be...extracted. The mysterious signal that woke it, for example. Or where to obtain one of those GAIA backups you've been having such a hard time finding.”

“If you knew, why didn't you just tell me?” Aloy snarled, only just keeping her temper in check.

The bald man began to pace back and forth as he considered the much younger woman before him. “I've been having problems of my own these past six months, Aloy. The difference is, I've made progress. So, once your anger at my entirely necessary deception has faded, why don't you come out here and find me in the Forbidden West, and learn all I've discovered?”

“Oh, I'll come find you alright,” Aloy swore through clinched teeth. Sylens, however, was not perturbed by the unvoiced threat.

“Yes, well the coordinates should make it simple enough...” and he paused before throwing salt into the wound of her obvious rage. “Even for you.” The dark skinned man vanished, a smug smile on his face which caused Aloy to clinch her fists and have to swallow her anger. After a moment of visually getting a hold of herself, she sighed and looked up to the heavens.

“There's no other choice,” she whispered to herself and the recording ended.

Olara put a hand on her hip and gestured at the blank space where the hologram had been. “Do you remember your mad scholar?” she asked Buck. “Who built the scaffolds and wanted so desperately into the door at GAIA Prime?” The big man nodded, a wary look on his face. “I'd bet all I have, that was him.”

* * *

It turned out Varl was in fact quite glad of company in the face of the dangers of the Forbidden West. The reunion of the young man and the Ancients who had become his tribe's neighbors was jolly and full of smiles. He'd evidently grown a full beard over the summer which gave his otherwise young face character, as Buck was quick to compliment him on. A compliment that clearly embarrassed the young man by his sheepish grin and self effacing body language.

The Sun King threw an impromptu feast, in his surprisingly modest private apartments for the party that was still a small, relatively quiet affair by the Palace's standards. Avad 14th Sun King of the Carja, discarded his royal regalia, dressed in simple linen balloon pants and a vest, though the crown was at rest on the top of his chair, ready to be re-donned at need. The King encouraged Varl to tell of his travels since the Battle of the Alight, and the Nora regaled the group with the story of his five months of tracking Aloy, the Nora Seeker across the South West until finally catching up to her at a strange ruin she had called a launch facility.

“There was a great sky ship of the old ones,” Varl told them with extravagant gestures, indicating it's size. “Still standing against a massive tower of steel and the poured stone of the Ancients.”

“Concrete,” Buck informed him. “It's called Concrete.”

“Concrete,” Varl repeated with a smile. “And around the tower coiled three Slither Fangs that hissed and snarled at each other as if fighting over the metal and the Sky Ship.”

“Slither Fangs?” demanded Nakoa, much to Travis' shock that evidently she hadn't heard of this type of machine either. Varl nodded and again held his arms apart to indicate the size disparity.

“They looked like massive snakes,” he assured her, “but with great hooded backs and at the end of their tails a wicked hook they shook to make a loud, rattling thunder. They spit a terrible acid and killed an entire Oseram Delver team. We found their camp, and what was left of them, just after the room of lies. The Slither Fangs killed them to a man, the poor sods never had a chance.”

“Towers?” demanded Doc with a curious expression on her face. “Ships of the Ancients?”

“Didn't that corporation of billionaires called Far Zenith have a launch facility in Wyoming somewhere?” Buck thought aloud. “I remember there was chatter about it on some of the conspiracy theory forums I followed for a laugh back in the day. Something about forget the world and save yourself as we fly off in outer space?”

“Yes, up by Bitter Creek, in Wyoming,” Travis informed him. “I escorted Frank out there for protection while they gave him the song and dance, but I didn't see the briefing he got. I know he came out livid and shouting at them.”

“There was a recording Aloy and I saw,” Varl told him. “In the Room of Lies. They made a great show about how they were trying to 'Save Humanity' but behind closed doors, it was just a lie. The recording urged these 'elites' as it called them to save themselves and fly to another star. I think he said it's name was Sirius.”

Travis shook his head. “Sounds about right. I recall Frank seemed very pleased with himself when the news broke their ship, the Odyssey blew up when they went to light their fusion drive.” Murray's eyes went back to Varl. “They had a shuttle still on the tower? After all these years?”

The Nora nodded gravely. “Not by much,” he admitted. “Aloy didn't have much trouble dropping it on the Slither Fangs. Though one of the cables held, and it brought the tower down with it. I thought for sure it was the end of Aloy! But she's incredible! She rode the wreckage down, leaping to a cable to swing to safety at the last instant!” He sighed. “Once we cleared the way and got into the,” and he hesitated over the unfamiliar word, “Data Center, I thought we had found a copy of GAIA, but evidently it was a fake. Something about...” and he paused to suss out exactly what he wanted to say. “I remember one of the images that made Aloy angry; the man in it called it a...logic bomb...”

Buck snickered to himself. “That sounds like Travis Tate, self styled 'super hacker.'”

Varl nodded. “He did call himself 'a Tate.' Aloy, she was about to give up, but I suggested we come here. I remembered Aloy said the Shaman Sylens knew a lot about the old world, and Blameless Marad is really good at finding people. It would have been a long walk, but she commanded two Chargers for us and here we are in less than a week.”

For the first time, the Sun King spoke, “And the Savior can command all machines?”

Varl shrugged again. “I can't say all machines, your Radiance, but she snuck up on the two we arrived riding and commanded them. That's how we got back here.” He sighed and gestured to the west. “She spoke with Sylens and then went West.”

“We'll catch up with her,” Travis assured the young man.

“I'm more concerned with this 'Slither Fang',” Nakoa declared. “Your Radiance, do your Carja Scholars keep records of such things?”

The Sun King nodded, but it was Marad who spoke as he snapped his fingers at one of the soldiers by the door. The solider immediately took to his heels through it. “We do indeed, worthy Nora. I'll have someone from the Hunter's Lodge here shortly with what we know of it.”

“We offered the Savior a full escort to the Embassy,” Avad the Sun King declared sadly. “It was, in fact, our intention to accompany the Savior at least as far as Sunfall, but...” he trailed off, lost in his own thoughts.

“She thought we would slow her down,” Varl completed with some rancor. A melancholy air settled over the group and they ate in silence for a time. The feast was quite extensive in it's fare, with an entire roasted turkey, apples, grapes and other fruit, along side salads of greens and vegetables from the gardens below the city with surprising variation and all roasted and prepared to perfection. Finally, there came a knock at the door heralding the return of the guard and an older man not in scholars robes, but dressed in armored clothing, similar to what the Nora wore, but with the precise refinement of the Carja. Trailing after him was a youth, laboring with a massive tome the size of his torso.

The older man stopped before the table and bowed to the Sun King who evidently knew him on sight. “Welcome, Hawk Ligan of the Hunter's Lodge,” Avad told him. “Sit at my table and eat your fill.”

“The honor is entirely mine, Your Radiance,” Ligan replied with a somewhat stiff bow that spoke of old joints complaining over a misspent youth. “I am informed the Sun King's guests request enlightenment about a newer machine? I have brought the King's List of Machines to shine the light of knowledge for them.” He opened the book the youth carried to a marked place and used him as an intelligent pedestal to walk about the table so all could see the drawing.

“The Slither Fang, guests of his Radiance! A terrible machine of the Hunter Killer type. A full twenty four steps long, with a maw that can swallow a man whole, when it isn't spitting a particularly strong acid that can kill a man and reduce him to a puddle of blood and viscera with a single blast. It travels quickly underground, digging a tunnel the size that a full grown man can walk upright in. This is not a machine for the new to hunting to attempt. My advice to your noble guests is that if they see one, they give it a wide berth.”

“No shit!” rumbled Buck as he saw the rendering. “Kind of a sick cross between a King Cobra and a rattle snake!”

“Taken to the usual obscene scale,” Doc added a shudder.

Buck caught Travis' eye when he saw the picture. “What do you think, boss? Fifty, sixty feet?”

“With this figure for scale? Easily,” Travis replied.

To Hawk Ligan, Doc asked, “Does this thing have any weak spots? Some kind of leverage we can have if we can't give it wide berth?”

Ligan rubbed his chin thoughtfully. “The acid sacks are noted in green on the drawing and can be pierced by most arrows. This will douse the machine in it's own Metal Bite acid and remove the spitting attack, but be weary! The sack is under considerable pressure and will burst with some force.”

“Here's hoping it doesn't come to that,” Travis muttered softly to himself.

* * *

September 23th, 3040

Three days of hard riding and cold camps in the wilderness just long enough to let the Striders recharge their Blaze canisters, finally brought the group to a high mesa overlooking a narrow canyon running out of the Pine Valley mountains along what had been called the Virgin River. “Look at that,” whispered Nakoa in awe of what she saw. The mountains parted as a curtain to reveal a narrow valley through which ran a creek or stream desperately intent on becoming a river. The Sun was setting down the mouth of the valley that ran in an ambling due west direction, which made it's significance to the Carja obvious.

On this edge of the bluff where they stood was a stone dwelling with a guard wall to keep machines out of the courtyard. Just beyond it, anchored into the building was a pair of massive iron chains that ran down into valley to a small promontory upon which sat a matching domicile at it's base. Next to the dwelling was a platform that hung from the chains with a complicated cog and gear system that appeared to be hand cranked so the platform could ride down the chain like a cable car.

“There's no way,” Olara swore after a single glance at the contraption.

Buck shrugged expressively as he leaned over his Strider's neck. “Either ride or climb,” he declared pragmatically. “Riding lets us keep the Striders.”

The door into the stone house opened, revealing a round faced, somewhat rotund man of east Asian ethnicity. He wore the metal fastened to leather armor in the style favored by the Oseram, in his case strips of leather with iron rings sewn to it, which were then gathered into a bib or apron, then held in place by a wide leather belt with a much larger ring over his stomach. It looked like a weightlifters or a wrestling champion's belt. A set of leather sewn to thick cloth protected his shoulders and outer arms down to his hands. He blinked in surprise to see the strangers on his doorstep. “Sparks from steel!” he swore, with a smile slowly spreading across his face. “Does everybody ride machines now?”

“You've seen a machine rider before?” Nakoa demanded.

“That I have!” he answered quickly with a gesture at her. “And a Nora as well! Took her down myself, a couple of hours ago. You kin of hers?”

“Aloy came through here?” Nakoa demanded. Travis shared a wink with Varl.

“Told you we'd catch up,” he declared then, turned back to the Oseram. “No,” Travis informed him. “We're not kin of Aloy. I'm Colonel Travis Murray, and my tribe are called the AmSci.”

“I'm Karhn,” the Oseram declared, then his eyes got wide and he pointed back at Travis. “I've heard of your people! The Captain of the Vanguard, uh, Erend is his name, he told me about how you defended Meridian.” The man drew up short and leaned in to whisper, “Are you really Ancients?”

Travis dismounted Black Jack and chuckled, holding out a hand the other shook vigorously. “We are,” he admitted, then gestured at the gondola behind Karhn. “Does this thing actually work?”

“Oh, sure,” Karhn bragged with a dismissive gesture. “I've been the Chain Lift Keeper for five winters now. People and supplies go into the Daunt, shards, minerals and just about everything else comes out. Why, it was the Chain Lift that kept the wild Tenakth from invading further east!”

Travis nodded thoughtfully. Turning back to his group, he declared, “Alright, we'll probably need to take the Striders down one at a time. I'll go down first with Black Jack to hold the landing, then...”

“Oh, I'm sorry,” Karhn interrupted, “I can't take you down.”

“Why not?” Travis demanded.

Karhn walked over to the edge of the platform, a platform without a railing and far too close to the edge for Travis' liking. He encompassed the entire valley with his gesture. “The Daunt,” he proclaimed. “The whole valley, is infested with a new machine. They're called Bristlebacks, nasty things, huge, angry, acid...” he gave a dismissive gesture. “Weird thing is they're not native to the Daunt, but an entire herd of them just showed up from somewhere yesterday. I'm under strict instructions not to let anyone down until they're dealt with. Until I hear the whistle blow down in Chainscrape it's all clear.”

“What's a Chainscrape?” Travis demanded. Karhn pointed with a gloved hand at a settlement halfway down the valley with a massive, circular dome of a building at it's center. Travis pulled on his chin as he thought, then turned back to the Oseram and declared, “You just said you took Aloy down a couple of hours ago.”

“I...uh...well...”

“Karhn,” Travis interrupted, with a friendly grip on his shoulder. “Let's not let our time together turn ugly. We're chasing down a threat to all life on this planet.” He caught the other man's eye to emphasize again, “All life. I couldn't care less about Bristlebacks or whistles from Chainscrape. Ok?”

Karhn's eyes darted from Travis to the rest of the group whereupon Buck cracked his knuckles loudly. “Well, it's your funeral, I guess.” Murray dug into his pocket and handed a small coin to the Keeper. “What's this?”

“A United States of America quarter dollar,” Travis told him with a smile. “The Ferryman is worth his toll.”

“What's a United States of America?”

Travis smiled at him. “You're standing in it. A thousand years ago, this land was called Utah, it was a state, of fifty others, that made up the USA. And that was the coin of the realm, so to speak.” Karhn's eyes went huge.

“A real coin of the Ancients?”

“Keep it under your hat,” Travis advised him. He walked over to the lift and raised the gate to step onto it. “Black Jack,” he called and pointed, causing the Strider to docilely walk behind him onto the lift and stand still.

“You're not going anywhere without me,” Nakoa declared as she slid off her Strider's back and joined him on the lift, Snow Flake behind her. “Will this hold two Striders weight?”

“Seems to,” Karhn replied as he closed the gate, and maned the crank. “Going down.” With a groan and rattle of gears, the gondola began it's decent, dangling between the two chains with a set of gears on a car on each that was attached to a bundle of massive wooden beams that came down and became both the housing of the gears and handle the Oseram cranked as well as the platform they stood on. Nakoa watched the man at work for a moment, then, finally satisfied they weren't about to plummet to their deaths, she leaned up against her husband and sighed.

“It's a beautiful view, isn't it?” Travis asked her as the land slowly rose to meet them.

“Have you been here before?” Nakoa asked him. “In the Ancient Time?”

Travis nodded thoughtfully, then removed his binoculars from their protective case. “Son of a bitch,” he whispered as he handed her the glasses and pointed. She looked through them, finding a skeleton of a stone and log building only just standing on the south bank of the creek. “That's Zion Lodge,” he informed her. “Or, what's left of it. I stayed there once on a leave from Cheyenne Mountain. This whole area was once called Zion National Park.”

“It looks like it was once a very beautiful place,” she told him, used to these little bouts of nostalgia that went with being the wife of a man over a thousand years her senior.

“Zion?” asked Karhn. “Odd word. What does it mean?”

“It refers to ancient kingdom,” Travis told him. “Long before even my time, so three or four thousand years ago, and thousands of miles to the east, over the Atlantic Ocean.”

The man grunted from his labor of turning the crank. “Today is full of surprises!”

“I just hope we can catch up with Aloy and get safe passage through this 'embassy.'”

Karhn laughed a strained laugh. “That might be a problem.”

“How's that?” demanded Nakoa.

“I brought the Sun Priest and his party down yesterday,” Karhn informed her. “He's the man supposed to run the Embassy, but he was still at the landing when I brought down the Savior a few hours ago. Pompous git if you ask me.” The car finally arrived at the landing, but the lower house was deserted, with only a few barrels and bags at what was likely some kind of custom's house. Karhn hesitantly shied around the Striders and raised the rail so that they could exit. “Now, you'll want to be careful,” he cautioned them. “Normally there would be soldiers here, but they've been pulled back to Chainscrape since the work stoppage.”

Travis pulled his AR15 around into a patrol low ready carry. “We'll be fine,” he assured the Keeper. “Black Jack, out and graze. Perimeter fifteen meters.”

The Strider gave an exaggerated nod and filed out and through the open gate to begin grazing beyond it. “Snow Flake, you too,” Nakoa ordered. Once the car was empty the Keeper returned to his crank and it began to rise again.

“He's going to get a heck of a workout today,” Travis opined as he watched the car ascend the chain.

“Honey,” Nakoa called, standing by the side of the customs house that had a piece of parchment affixed to it. “Look at this.”

Travis walked over, keying on his Focus as he did so. Instantly, the device at his temple 'read' the Carja glyphs and then holographically laid over them the translation in English. “By mandate, mandate he says!” Travis chuckled. “By mandate of Commander Nozar,” he continued. “All residents of the Daunt are herewith informed of the following:” He shared a glance with his wife and continued to read.

“The gates between Barren Light and No Man's Land are hereby ordered shut and sealed in expectation of the imminent Embassy. None are allowed passage either way until further notice. No exception will be made, regardless of clan, house or tribe. Based on previous grievances and misunderstandings, let it be clear that no exceptions will be made for the Oseram either. Any outstanding arrangements made pertaining to passage are hereby declared postponed or void, depending on the nature and timing of the arrangement. No Exceptions will be made. Again, to eliminate any doubts should they remain: ALL OF THE ABOVE PERTAINS TO THE OSERAM REGARDLESS OF CIRCUMSTANCES, EXCUSES, OR SO-CALLED BINDING CONTRACTS! Any complaints and/or restitution (if at all applicable) can be addressed to Captain Lawan, my second-in-command. Signed in the Light of the Sun, Nozar Arin Khuvaman, Commander of Barren Light.” Travis chuckled to himself. “Sounds like a charming fellow.”

“Sounds like a typical Carja to me,” Nakoa opined.

Travis tapped his Focus to make the translation disappear, and smiled at his wife. “I'm sure. Once we get everybody down, as late in the day as it is, we'll probably stay the night in this 'Chainscrape' and head into Barren Light in the morning.”

“That's what I love about you, darling,” Nakoa told him returning his smile. “Your sunny optimism!”

* * *

Source URL:https://bigclosetr.us/topshelf/fiction/103777/journey-into-forbidden-west-part-1