Halo Lighting System First Strike Games User Manual

Page 31

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ERIC NYLUND

27

much altitude as the Banshee could manage—about three hun-

dred meters. As he cleared the top, what he saw made him ease

off the throttle.

The valley was ten kilometers across and sloped before him,

thick with Douglas firs that thinned and gave way to trampled

fields and the Big Horn River beyond. Camped in the fields

were thousands upon thousands of Covenant troops. Their mass

covered the entire valley, and thin, smoke-choked sunlight

glinted off a sea of red, yellow, and blue armor. They moved in

tight columns and swarmed along the river's edge—so many that

it looked like someone had kicked over the largest anthill in

existence.

And they were building. Hundreds of flimsy white dome-shaped

tents were being erected, atmosphere pits for the

methane-breathing Grunts. Farther back were the odd polyhedral

huts of the Elite units, guarded by a long line of dozens of

beetlelike Wraith tanks. Guard towers punctuated the valley; they

spiraled up from mobile treaded bases, ten meters tall and

topped with plasma turrets.

The rules had indeed changed. In more than a hundred battles

Fred had never seen the Covenant set up encampments of such

magnitude. All they did was kill.

Floating behind all this activity, almost brushing against the

far hills, the Covenant cruiser sat thirty meters off the ground. It

looked like a great bloated fish with stubby stabilizing fins. Its

gravity lift was in operation, a tube of scintillating energy that

moved matter to and from the ground. Stacks of purple crates

gently floated down from the craft. In the afternoon light he

could see its weapons bristling along its length, casting

spider-like shadows across its hull.

Their Banshees leveled out, and Fred dropped back to tighten

his formation with Kelly and Joshua.

He glanced again at the enemy ship and the guard towers. One

good hit from those weapons could take them out.

Fred saw other Banshee patrols circling the valley. He frowned.

If they passed them, the enemy pilots would almost certainly de-

mand to know their business... and there was no way of knowing

what the established patrol routes were. That meant he'd have to

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