Halo Lighting System First Strike Games User Manual

Page 64

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60

HALO: FIRST STRIKE

thousand Covenant, mostly Engineers. There's a light company

of Grunts, and only a hundred Elites."

"Only a hundred?" the Chief muttered.

He waved his team forward toward a heavy door at the back of

the launch bay. The air was full of smoke and fire-suppressing

mist, which reduced visibility to a dozen meters.

The rattle of assault rifle fire echoed through the bay. The

Chief spun to his right and brought his own rifle to bear.

Locklear stood over the twitching corpses of the Engineers.

He fired another burst into the fallen aliens.

"Don't waste your ammunition, Corporal," the Sergeant said.

"They may be ugly, but they're harmless."

"They're harmless now, Sarge," Locklear replied. He wiped a

spatter of alien blood from his cheek and smirked.

The Chief tended to agree with Locklear's threat analysis of

the Covenant: When in doubt, kill. Still, he found the young Ma-

rine's actions unnecessary... and a little sloppy.

The architecture of the Covenant fighter bay was similar to the

interior of the other Covenant ship the Chief had recently been

inside, the Truth and Reconciliation. Low indirect lights illumi-

nated the dark purple walls. The alien metal appeared to be sten-

ciled with odd, faintly luminescent geometric patterns that

overlapped each other. The ceiling was vaulted and unneces-

sarily high, maybe ten meters. In contrast to a human ship, it was a

waste of space.

The Chief spotted a large door at the back of the bay.

The door was a distorted hexagonal shape and large enough

that the entire team could enter at the same time—not that he'd

ever be foolish enough to take up such a formation in hostile ter-

ritory. The door had four sections that, when keyed to open,

would silently slide away from the center.

"That will take us to the main corridor," Cortana said. "And

from there, to the bridge."

The Chief waved Locklear to the right side of the door,

Sergeant Johnson to the left.

"Lieutenant Haverson," he called out, "you're our rear guard.

Polaski, hit the door controls. Hand signals from now on."

Haverson tossed an ironic salute to the Chief but tightened his

grip on his weapon and scanned the bay.

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