Halo Lighting System First Strike Games User Manual

Page 11

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ERIC NYLUND

The Pelican's aft section had been stripped of the padded

crash seats that usually lined the section's port and starboard

sides. The life-support generators on the firewall between pas-

senger and pilot's compartment had also been discarded to make

room. Under other circumstances, such modifications would

have left the Pelican's troop bay unusually cavernous. Every

square centimeter of space, however, was occupied.

Twenty-seven Spartans braced themselves and clung to the

frame of the ship; they crouched in their MJOLNIR armor to ab-

sorb the shock of their rapid descent. Their armor was half a ton

of black alloy, faintly luminous green ceramic plates, and wink-

ing energy shield emitters. Polarized visors and full helmets made

them look part Greek hero and part tank—more machine than

human. At their feet equipment bags and ammunition boxes

were lashed in place. Everything rattled as the ship jostled

through the increasingly dense air.

Fred hit the COM and barked: "Brace yourselves!" The ship

lurched, and he struggled to keep his footing.

SPARTAN-087, Kelly, moved nearer and opened a frequency.

"Chief, we'll get that COM malfunction squared away after we

hit planetside," she said.

Fred winced when he realized that he'd just broadcast on

FLEETCOM 7: He'd spammed every ship in range. Damn it.

He opened a private channel to Kelly. "Thanks," he said. Her

reply was a subtle nod.

He knew better than to make such a simple mistake—and as

his second in command, Kelly was rattled by his mistake with

the COM, too. He needed her rock-solid. He needed all of Red

Team frosty and wired tight.

Which meant that he needed to make sure he held it together.

No more mistakes.

He checked the squad's biomonitors. They showed all green

on his heads-up display, with pulse rates only marginally accel-

erated. The dropship's pilot was a different story. Mitchell's

heart fired like an assault rifle.

Any problems with Red Team weren't physical; the biomoni-

tors confirmed that much. Spartans were used to tough missions;

UNSC High Command never sent them on any "easy" jobs.

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