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The Burning Sands Trilogy Omnibus: Burning Sands, #0
The Burning Sands Trilogy Omnibus: Burning Sands, #0
The Burning Sands Trilogy Omnibus: Burning Sands, #0
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The Burning Sands Trilogy Omnibus: Burning Sands, #0

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Sometimes, waking is worse than the nightmare.

Earth is dying and humanity's only hope of survival will be somewhere among the stars. When Reggie Lee joins defense contractor Frontierza, the company's work on advanced hibernation technology for sleeper colony ships seems the perfect career starter. He has the opportunity to lead the first team to test the technology in a month-long cryogenic sleep.

But the world Reggie wakes to is nothing like he expects. It's a world where life is cheap and only the strong survive.

Pick up this exciting post-apocalyptic trilogy today, and see this new world of Burning Sands.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 31, 2017
ISBN9781386534334
The Burning Sands Trilogy Omnibus: Burning Sands, #0

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    The Burning Sands Trilogy Omnibus - P R Adams

    The Burning Sands Trilogy Omnibus

    The Burning Sands Trilogy Omnibus

    P R Adams

    Promethean Tales

    Contents

    Also by P R Adams

    Beneath Burning Sands

    Test Bunker 1

    Chapter 1

    Chapter 2

    Chapter 3

    Chapter 4

    Chapter 5

    Chapter 6

    Chapter 7

    Chapter 8

    Chapter 9

    Chapter 10

    Chapter 11

    Chapter 12

    Chapter 13

    Chapter 14

    Chapter 15

    Chapter 16

    Chapter 17

    Chapter 18

    Chapter 19

    Chapter 20

    Chapter 21

    Chapter 22

    Chapter 23

    Chapter 24

    Chapter 25

    Chapter 26

    Chapter 27

    Chapter 28

    Chapter 29

    Chapter 30

    Chapter 31

    Chapter 32

    Chapter 33

    Chapter 34

    Chapter 35

    Chapter 36

    Chapter 37

    Chapter 38

    Chapter 39

    Chapter 40

    Chapter 41

    Chapter 42

    Chapter 43

    Chapter 44

    Chapter 45

    Chapter 46

    Chapter 47

    Chapter 48

    Chapter 49

    Chapter 50

    Acknowledgments

    Across Burning Sands

    Chapter 1

    Chapter 2

    Chapter 3

    Chapter 4

    Chapter 5

    Chapter 6

    Chapter 7

    Chapter 8

    Chapter 9

    Chapter 10

    Chapter 11

    Chapter 12

    Chapter 13

    Chapter 14

    Chapter 15

    Chapter 16

    Chapter 17

    Chapter 18

    Chapter 19

    Chapter 20

    Chapter 21

    Chapter 22

    Chapter 23

    Chapter 24

    Chapter 25

    Chapter 26

    Chapter 27

    Chapter 28

    Chapter 29

    Chapter 30

    Chapter 31

    Chapter 32

    Chapter 33

    Chapter 34

    Chapter 35

    Chapter 36

    Chapter 37

    Chapter 38

    Chapter 39

    Chapter 40

    Chapter 41

    Chapter 42

    Chapter 43

    Chapter 44

    Chapter 45

    Chapter 46

    Chapter 47

    Chapter 48

    Chapter 49

    Chapter 50

    Acknowledgments

    Beyond Burning Sands

    Chapter 1

    Chapter 2

    Chapter 3

    Chapter 4

    Chapter 5

    Chapter 6

    Chapter 7

    Chapter 8

    Chapter 9

    Chapter 10

    Chapter 11

    Chapter 12

    Chapter 13

    Chapter 14

    Chapter 15

    Chapter 16

    Chapter 17

    Chapter 18

    Chapter 19

    Chapter 20

    Chapter 21

    Chapter 22

    Chapter 23

    Chapter 24

    Chapter 25

    Chapter 26

    Chapter 27

    Chapter 28

    Chapter 29

    Chapter 30

    Chapter 31

    Chapter 32

    Chapter 33

    Chapter 34

    Chapter 35

    Chapter 36

    Chapter 37

    Chapter 38

    Chapter 39

    Chapter 40

    Chapter 41

    Chapter 42

    Chapter 43

    Chapter 44

    Chapter 45

    Chapter 46

    Chapter 47

    Chapter 48

    Chapter 49

    Chapter 50

    Acknowledgments

    Inside Burning Sands Preview

    Prologue

    Chapter 1

    Chapter 2

    Chapter 3

    Chapter 4

    Chapter 5

    About the Author

    Also by P R Adams

    For updates on new releases and news on other series, visit my website and sign up for my mailing list at:


    http://www.p-r-adams.com


    The Burning Sands Series

    Beneath Burning Sands

    Across Burning Sands

    Beyond Burning Sands

    Inside Burning Sands

    Over Burning Sands

    War for Burning Sands

    Books in the On The Brink Universe

    The Stefan Mendoza Trilogy

    Into Twilight

    Gone Dark

    End State

    Stefan Mendoza: The Human Deception Trilogy

    Split Image (2020)

    Hard Burn (2021)

    Null Point (2021)


    The Rimes Trilogy

    Momentary Stasis

    Transition of Order

    Awakening to Judgment


    The ERF Series

    Turning Point

    Valley of Death

    Jungle Dark

    Chariot Bright

    Dawn Fire


    The Lancers Series

    Deep Descent

    Deadly Game

    Dire Straits

    Dark Secrets

    The War in Shadow Saga

    Shadow Moves

    Shadow Play

    Shadow Strike

    Shadow Talk

    Shadow Pawn

    Shadow Fall

    Books in The Chain Series

    The Chain: Shattered

    The Journey Home

    Rock of Salvation

    From the Depths

    Ever Shining

    Beneath Burning Sands

    This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or otherwise, without written permission from the author.


    BENEATH BURNING SANDS


    Copyright © 2017 P R Adams


    All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.


    Cover by Aleksandra Bilic - www.linkedin.com/in/aleksandrabilic

    Vellum flower icon Created with Vellum

    For Cornelius and Zira, the pioneers.

    TEST BUNKER 1

    TEST BUNKER 1

    Chapter One

    Waking from hibernation was like getting a hydrochloric acid drip while a heavyweight boxer worked your gut. At twenty-seven years old, Reggie Katsura Lee—Reginald to his subordinates—had gone through the experience once before and thought he’d discovered the pinnacle of human pain.

    It was worse the second time.

    He opened his eyes to the expected sight of a gummy, gooey, distorted window into the world outside: the hibernation tank lid. There was nothing to do about that, not until the waking process completed. The tank’s motors whirred and the drainage system gurgled, sucking away the slushy brine he’d floated in for the last month. At the same time, the tank-fluid heaters and his reconstituted, reheated, recirculating blood slowly warmed his body temperature back to normal.

    He needed to scream but couldn’t. The hard rubber mask covering his face had yet to pull back and clear his esophagus.

    His panic was apparently the signal the system had been waiting for; the mask assembly peeled off, taking a layer of dead skin with it.

    Free of the mask, he gasped.

    Then his body shook and his guts twisted. He vomited up the fluid filling his stomach. The drainage system slurped up that briny mixture as well without complaint. After a minute, the pumps went silent, and the tank shifted from a horizontal position to a forty-five degree angle, sliding him down to the bottom.

    It was colder this time around. He shivered uncontrollably and his teeth chattered. He glanced down to confirm the thermal insulation layer was intact. Blurry vision and all, he could still see it: a second skin—gray, slick, and covered here and there by clumps of a phlegmy, green, cheese-like substance. It reminded Reggie of pictures he’d seen of newborn babies during an advanced biology class his mother had forced him to take in high school.

    You need more college prep classes. Your father’s money can only do so much. That had been in her clipped, crisp English. She was third generation Japanese-American and always seemed ashamed of it. Ashamed of being Japanese or American, he could never tell. Her contempt for his father’s Chinese heritage was clearer.

    Money solves so many problems, Reggie reminded himself.

    The lid popped, and warm, stale air rushed in.

    The first time he’d gone under had been for a week in the main research lab of his employer, Frontierza. The air in the lab had been cool and fresh.

    But now…

    The habitat modules of Test Bunker 1 were just larger versions of that lab. Everything should have been the same.

    Everything.

    Reggie hissed as he pulled the IV lines from his arms with shaking hands. Dark blood oozed from the puffy wounds left by the needle.

    No one could see him. He let a tear track down the tender skin of his face, but his throat was too raw to cry. He lay in the tank for a minute, counting the seconds for distraction, just hoping the pain would pass. When it didn’t, he dug the hooked fingers of his right hand into the insulation layer covering him and began peeling it away.

    His fingers were weak, stiff, clumsy.

    Finally, the insulation started to dry out and harden. It came away in whole sections—an arm, his chest, his legs. It tore away hair that shouldn’t have had time to re-grow, leaving his flesh tingly and raw. He was sure someone had run a cheese grater over his scrotum.

    Panic threatened to settle in, so he took several deep breaths, the way he’d been trained to do. The pain was expected. He’d just forgotten how bad it was. The cold and stiffness was probably the result of not being ready for the pain. That was all.

    The sole of his foot scraped across the lip at the bottom of the tank as he took a tentative step out. He immediately collapsed to the warm, white floor tiles. The impact was enough to force a scream through his raw throat. He shifted his legs beneath him, confused by their weakness and the sense of vertigo that had toppled him. It wasn’t just his brain that was having problems.

    Something was wrong.

    The room was just as he remembered it, although darker than expected. LEDs flickered beneath plastic covers. In the half-light he could make out the details of the commander’s cabin: the frosted plastic of the corner shower; the white, molded plastic of his dresser and desk with built-in terminal; the full-length mirror he’d specifically requested for everyone; and the sturdy, fold-down bunk on the wall opposite the door.

    Hatch, he mouthed, correcting himself out of habit. He needed to reinforce to his team that this wasn’t some informal testing environment. Terminology mattered.

    The hibernation systems in Test Bunker 1 were meant for astronauts and explorers going on deep space travel, so everything was modeled after the exploration ships: hatches, passageways, cabins, and so on. His cabin in the Command Habitat Module was analogous to the Mission Commander’s cabin in the current sleeper ship design. In the sleeper ship, the module would rest beneath the main hub; in Test Bunker 1, it was fifteen feet beneath the main body of the complex, under the burning sands of the Nevada desert.

    He stared at the dim LEDs for a few seconds, wondering if there might be a power problem. There had to be. That would be the only reasonable explanation for the strange waking aftereffects. Maybe his blood hadn’t been fully heated after reconstitution. Maybe it had been injected at a higher pressure than expected.

    A reactor failure. That would explain a lot.

    A piercing jolt stabbed his brain. He closed his eyes and shook his head, wishing the pain away.

    Water, he realized. He was dehydrated. There should be a hydration solution somewhere...the memory slithered through his brain like a slug. At the base of the tank was a white plastic bottle with a faint trickle of fluid oozing over the side. He stretched forward and pulled the bottle out of its niche. Oil-slick, orange goo dripped onto his hands; he took a slow pull.

    Sickening sweetness and grimace-inducing saltiness wrapped up in a gritty slurry—that was what the biologists and nutritionists had come up with as the ultimate wake-up shake. It was a horrible concoction of essential vitamins, nutrients, minerals, and a fluid that could carry it all and help hold it down.

    Reggie nearly spit up what he’d managed to swallow; the anti-nausea component wasn’t quite as effective as advertised.

    His stomach protested, but the chemicals eventually shut down the vomit reflex. After a few deep breaths, he finished the bottle off. He sat up and leaned against the tank. And waited. His team would be going through the same thing, most of them for the first time. He’d warned them what it would be like, but...

    His stomach lurched again.

    He daydreamed about taking his rebuilt Porsche 911 out to Wyoming to test the engine. He tried to remember the last trip to Kandy Kane’s and all the money he’d spent on strippers. They didn’t even pretend to like him—but it was still a vivid memory. Then he visualized his digital assistant screen showing the bonus Frontierza had deposited in the team’s accounts just before hibernation. He imagined getting back to his FlashFit routine and hitting the new targets he’d set for himself, as soon as the shakes and weakness of his muscles wore off.

    The headache subsided slightly, then the nausea. His core was still chilled, but it was getting better. After a moment of convincing himself he was ready, he hauled himself back to his feet using the hibernation tank for support.

    The room spun and his legs wobbled, but he stayed upright.

    He glanced down and let out a yelp.

    The weakness of his muscles wasn’t due to the awakening process.

    His stomach was a soft, sunken sheet of flesh. The muscles he’d worked so hard to define were gone. The same was true of his thighs. Memories of a pudgy little boy came back. Ridiculed. Harassed. Ostracized. He’d fought so hard to escape that Reggie and to be someone who couldn’t ever have been like that. He was someone respected. A project leader with a team of twenty to see through the most important project Frontierza had ever had...the most important project humans had ever had!

    Not real, he muttered. It came out like a weak squeal.

    He made his way to the mirror, each step stiff and awkward. He was terrified what he might see after a month in the capsule.

    His pecs—never on par with his abs—were soft, flabby. Almost sagging. Other than the puffy wounds from the needles and discoloration up and down his arms, they were unremarkable. There was absolutely no definition. Nothing! There had been an artistry to what he’d done to his forearms and deltoids. The carefully crafted physique that had so completely supplemented the perfect hairstyle to create an image worthy of his Harvard and Stanford pedigree...wiped out. All gone!

    He really was doughy Reggie, the son of a failed millionaire, soft and weak as a newborn.

    Tears threatened again.

    He poked an index finger into his gut; the tip disappeared up to the first joint. Who cared if the security systems caught him blubbering like a baby? Everything was lost now. Everything! His promotion was probably—

    He jumped.

    A deep, metallic clang hummed through the wall. An echo. Plumbing, or maybe air conditioning.

    Then a scraping sound, metal-on-metal. Someone doing maintenance?

    The lights went out.

    Chapter Two

    It had to be the others, Reggie was sure. A prank, maybe a misguided celebration. The hatch would open, and they would shout surprise!. And then they would laugh at him, laugh at what he’d become in hibernation.

    The emergency lights kicked on, revealing…nobody.

    Little more than thin strips of amber LEDs with attached batteries, the lights were good for maybe a few hours. They cast everything in a golden, reassuring glow. But Reggie wasn’t reassured. He moved to his dresser and slid a drawer open quietly. Plastic-wrapped underwear, gym clothes, coveralls, and socks were arrayed inside, all adorned with Frontierza’s logo—a spaceship heading toward a star. He pulled the underwear out first, tore open the wrapper, and tugged the briefs on, wincing at the discomfort of the one size fits all design. The coveralls went on next. He had one sock on when the clanging started again. What was it?

    He was only halfway through pulling on the second sock when the scraping returned. What the hell?

    The terminal came to a sort of half-life. It was a thin slab of glass with a graceful, arcing base that flattened out and slid into the desktop. The display portion turned black, and a pulsing circle of turquoise filled the center.

    System activated, said a tinny voice.

    Reggie nearly fell onto his butt. He’d completely forgotten about the automated system: ARDA—Analysis and Research Data Assistant. It had been a last-minute addition to the proof of concept, another prototype. He wasn’t even sure it was truly functional, although he’d become better dealing with the advanced interface than anyone on his team.

    He leaned closer to the terminal. Hello?

    Voice recognition successful, Arda said. Her voice was clean and precise—sophisticated—like someone with an excellent education and stage experience. Project Director Reginald Katsura Lee.

    The clanging from outside nearly drowned out his last name.

    Yeah, that’s me. Reggie found sneakers in another drawer and pulled them on. Can you understand me?

    Voice distortion compensation and noise cancellation enabled. Comprehension within limits.

    Finally something was working right.

    There’s, uh... The clanging and scraping was probably nothing, but the power outage could be a serious issue. The lights went out and I came out of hibernation hard. Is something wrong with the reactor?

    The reactor has been shut off. The facility is running on battery power.

    Um. The sluggishness caused by the hibernation and the metallic banging made it hard to figure out why that was bad. He covered his ears and concentrated. Wait. How long before we get power back online? Battery power can’t keep all the hibernation tanks running forever.

    Battery power will expire in fifteen minutes and thirty-two seconds.

    Fifteen min—

    That had to be wrong. Impossible. The batteries were rated for days.

    It took hours to bring someone out of hibernation properly. Hours and a lot of power.

    There are people still in hibernation. Right? You woke me first. That’s standard—

    That is standard protocol.

    Right. Well, we can’t wake the others in fifteen minutes.

    You have sufficient power to wake eleven other hibernating subjects using the emergency protocols used to wake you. This will consume eighty percent of stored power.

    Eleven... Reggie blinked. There are twenty people down here with me.

    There are sixteen personnel in Test Bunker One.

    Names and titles scrolled down the display.

    No, there were... The banging noise grew louder. Hey! Where’s Marissa? Marissa Ortiz? And Susan Tyler? And Dale Robbins?

    Someone else was missing; he couldn’t remember who. And he didn’t recognize one of the names.

    Arda said, Marissa Ortiz, Susan Tyler, and Perry Goodwin’s hibernation tanks all suffered catastrophic failure. Dale Robbins expired shortly after entering hibernation.

    Perry Goodwin. That was his name.

    Oh shit!

    Expired? Catastrophic failure?

    Arda didn’t respond.

    This wasn’t happening. He’d selected Marissa and Susan himself, the hottest lab tech and scientist he’d ever seen. And Dale was a real friend and professional, exactly the sort of supportive follower a manager needed to hold a team together, plus, he was as big into FlashFit as Reggie was. Dale had been the only person Reggie could open up to, the only person who understood the crushing pressure that was there every day.

    The banging intensified and became rhythmic. He couldn’t think. Could you stop the banging and scraping sounds, please?

    Reggie got up and headed for the hatch, leaning against the wall for support.

    There is no control over the reported sounds.

    What? Reggie glared over his shoulder at the terminal. Why not?

    The sounds are from an external source.

    External source?

    Reggie stopped at the hatch.

    Suddenly it dawned on him: This was a test.

    He felt stupid, but then he remembered that he’d just come out of a month-long sleep. He grimaced and set a hand on the hatch release bar.

    Cancel simulation. Okay?

    The clanging stopped, and something heavy rattled and slammed against the wall and floor outside. Whatever had made the noise settled against the hatch with a loud thud.

    A distorted roar boomed through the corridor outside.

    It reminded Reggie of an enraged gorilla: deep, throaty, bone-jarring.

    He pulled his hand away from the release bar and stepped back.

    Wh-what was that?

    He flashed back to nightmares of facing a test he hadn’t studied for.

    Arda said, The sounds registering on audio sensors are from the external source previously identified. Also, the hatch to the Command Habitat Module has been breeched. It might have fallen into the passageway.

    No. Reggie took two steps back from his hatch. "I don’t understand. What’s going on? We’re fifty feet below ground, one hundred miles from the nearest population center, in the heart of the desert. No one could be here. And the power can’t be down. We have the most advanced fusion reactor known to humanity and a field of low-maintenance windmills and solar panels for backup. There are so many redundancies built into everything down here, nothing can fail. This can’t be happening."

    Another heavy thud sounded outside.

    Not metallic like the first noise. The sound had changed.

    Reggie backed away until his butt banged against the hibernation tank.

    Arda said, The reactor was taken offline as a security and safety measure. Perimeter security was breached three months ago. Its voice suddenly sounded far too loud. You were awakened fifteen minutes ago, when power from the renewable sources failed.

    Reggie turned around and held a finger to his lips. Arda, can you cut your volume by about half, please?

    Audio output reduced by fifty percent.

    Thank you.

    Security breach. Power cut off. Something hacking into the Command Habitat Module.

    Reggie edged along the tank, then froze.

    The clanging began again, this time much closer.

    Someone was in the passageway just outside the hatch to his cabin.

    They had to have broken into the Command Habitat Module, which was just him and his management team. Whoever it was had broken in and triggered the reactor shutdown that...

    Wait.

    Did you say the reactor shut down three months ago?

    Eighty-eight days, sixteen hours, and forty—

    Eighty-eight days? What the hell? We were only scheduled to be asleep for a month.

    The clanging grew louder and Reggie cupped his hands over his ears. For a simulation, the noise was dangerously loud.

    He felt legitimately threatened. If his guts hadn’t already been purged during the wake-up, he would probably have crapped himself.

    What’s going on, Arda? This doesn’t make any sense!

    As stated, security has been breached. You have less than thirteen minutes of power remaining. You can now wake ten people.

    Ten? You said eleven.

    The simulation he was trapped in was messed up, unfair. It was like that thing they did in that space movie, the simulation with a Japanese name. You couldn’t win it; the test was supposed to evaluate how the participant dealt with losing. Reggie hated it. This was his team, his responsibility.

    The clanging stopped.

    Something heavy scraped against the Command Module hatch that had fallen from above. Something was moving it.

    The simulation was calling for some sort of defense. He needed security, people who could deal with an intruder. He needed to block the hatch to his cabin first. He dug another set of coveralls from the drawer and tore the plastic wrapper open, then hurried to the hatch mechanism and used the coveralls to tie the bar tight against the frame. No sooner had he finished than the bar seemed to move slightly, as if something were testing it. The coverall material strained but held.

    He backed away. Uh, Arda, prioritize the list of people to wake based off physical parameters—um, size, then fitness scores. After that, weapons qualifications. After that, sort on...

    The clanging began again, now directly against the hatch. It was deafening.

    Prioritize technical skills, then military training, then—

    The hatch shook.

    It was just aluminum, Reggie realized. Not steel. Not some crazy materials like a sleeper space craft would have.

    Wake them up! Wake them up! He glared at the terminal. Do you hear me?

    The list sorted, and the names at the top began to blink. Reggie’s guts twisted. None of his management team had made the cut.

    Once again, he didn’t recognize one of the names: Rios, Christian. Someone he didn’t know had been selected over those he did.

    At least two of the security team had been selected.

    Reggie wiped a trembling hand over his face. The idea of condemning people to death was sickening. If this was a simulation, he was going to file a complaint.

    The banging grew even louder, and the hatch visibly shook in its frame. Reggie was sure his head was going to explode.

    Awakening commencing, Arda said.

    The awakening process dimmed the emergency lights.

    Something big and metallic punched through the hatch with a nightmarish, groaning squeal, twisting the metal at the top into sharp, ugly teeth.

    The terrible, animal roar he’d heard earlier filled the cabin through the gash. A shadow on the other side of the hole sniffed wildly at the air. Reggie recoiled. The shadow was big enough to displace the air and had a foul musk, worse than a locker room before cleaning day.

    It wasn’t a simulation.

    Something really was in the passageway. And it was coming to kill him.

    Chapter Three

    The dark head of the weapon bashing in the cabin’s hatch twisted against the shiny aluminum. The metal head rocked from side to side, and metal squealed on metal. There was even a metallic scent, as if aluminum particles had been knocked free and suspended in the air.

    It was stuck!

    The weapon was a crude axe. A huge, crude axe. Dulled from repeated use, maybe against metal hatches throughout the complex.

    But what mattered was the weapon seemed stuck. He had a chance. He glanced around the cabin, hoping to spot a weapon. A knife, a gun, a bazooka...something!

    What he had was a hibernation tank in the cabin center, a shower and toilet against the western wall, a desk and mirror against the eastern wall, and a bunk and dresser drawers against the southern wall. The dresser drawers held his clothing and personal possessions.

    No weapons.

    Bestial grunting and snorting leaked through the hole. Once again, Reggie thought of a gorilla. He held his breath, hoping the thing would lose interest.

    Instead, the axe head twisted in the hole. A jagged piece of aluminum fell from the hatch with a crack. The weapon started to come free.

    The grunting and snorting intensified. Then the axe head pulled free with a wrenching of metal.

    And then the banging began again.

    The whole cabin seemed to shudder from the blows. Whatever was on the other side of the hatch was going to break in and try to kill him.

    Reggie dropped to his knees and searched the drawers, hoping for a pleasant surprise, something like a shotgun or a laser sword. The drawers held nothing more dangerous than the dirty clothes he’d bagged up before going into hibernation.

    He glanced at the terminal. Do we have any weapons inside the complex?

    Frontierza stored no weapons within Test Bunker 1. The purpose of the research was to test—

    A no is fine, thanks. Reggie got to his feet.

    No weapons. He was screwed.

    The axe head got stuck again, and an eerie quiet settled over the cabin. Reggie sighed in relief.

    The dim lighting made it impossible to pick out details in the passageway through the opening torn in the hatch, but he could see something moving beyond the axe head.

    Black hair rushed by the hole, and then an eye peered into the cabin.

    Shit! Reggie stepped back.

    The eye was big—bigger than a human eye—and bloodshot. The eye moved, was replaced by a large human nose, which made loud sniffing sounds.

    Reggie fought down a whimpering, gurgling sound deep in his throat. He fought back panic.

    Panic was surrender. Panic was death.

    The mirror! If he shattered it, he might get lucky and get a decent-sized shard. Wrap it with sheets from the plastic packets beneath the bed, and he might be able to get a stab at the thing before the glass cut his hands to shreds. But that wouldn’t kill something as big as it seemed to be, even if it was human. He needed something that could get to its guts or heart or brain.

    The thing went back to work twisting the axe loose, and after a minute of high-pitched metal-on-metal scraping, the weapon came free once more.

    And then came the banging.

    It was more like a terrible sundering of metal now, all squeals and grinding and groaning. Another piece of metal—this one as big as a slice of New York pizza—curled up and fell to the floor.

    The thing stuck its entire face against the hole, dark eyes rolling, broad nose sniffing, thick lips peeling back to reveal large teeth. The face was human, or nearly so, with a broad forehead, wide, protruding cheekbones and a heavy beard and mustache. Its skin was somewhat coppery in the amber LED light.

    A giant ape-man, or a caveman.

    The black eyes met Reggie’s, and the dark lips twisted into a triumphant smile.

    Reggie shook his head. It wasn’t happening. It couldn’t be.

    The axe rattled to the passageway floor. Thick, knotty fingers tested the hatch, grabbing at the mangled aluminum. Finally, the thing pulled.

    The hatch groaned but held. The fingers slipped back out, and the axe scraped over the floor.

    The banging resumed.

    It won’t hold long.

    Now he understood what had happened to the people who had died. Catastrophic failure of the hibernation tanks. Of course. Something that could hack through an aluminum hatch could tear apart one of the tanks. Easily.

    Reggie sucked in air. He turned to the terminal. How long before the others are awake?

    Seven minutes and forty-five seconds remain in the awakening process.

    You said when those were done, we’d have power left over.

    The awakening process will consume eighty percent—

    Yeah, that’s it. Reggie dropped to all fours and crawled to the tank. He was still weak. I want you to re-route power to my cabin.

    You wish to abort the awakening process?

    No. Reggie tried to pry the hibernation tank’s base plate away, but it was put together too well to get even a fingernail underneath.

    Not made in China, his mother would have observed, coldly.

    Reggie leaned back onto his elbows and kicked the plate. It buckled near the seam. He stuck a couple of fingers under the edge—then quickly pulled them back.

    A half-inch of flesh lay curled against the side of his index finger. Red pinpricks of blood slowly bubbled up all along the scrape.

    The banging changed in tenor and rhythm. Reggie glanced at the hatch; it was more than halfway cut through. The creature was striking faster now.

    Reggie grabbed the base plate again, this time a little more cautiously. He pulled it aside, revealing the tank’s underside. Hoses, cables, molded metal and plastic: he wasn’t an engineer or technician, so it was all Greek to him.

    Guilt hit him.

    You need to understand technology, Reginald. Without technology, you might as well just be an animal. His mother’s stern frown burned in his memory forever.

    His training classes had taught him the basic premises behind hibernation: blood drained and stored, a brine-like injection replacing the blood, filling the digestive system, and surrounding the body. Then the freezing. Upon thawing, the blood would be reconstituted and the injected fluid drained. All excess fluids would be held in a reservoir for analysis, then eventually recycled.

    But at the moment, those fluids were still stored in the tank’s reservoir.

    Do you still wish to re-route power to the cabin? Arda asked.

    Wait. Give me a minute. Reggie reached into the opening and tapped what looked like the underside of a sink. There were hoses connected to it—feeders and drains. It made sense for the drain hoses to be on the bottom, so he began with the largest one there. The gap between the tank’s underside and the floor was too small for a good grip, but the hoses had sturdy, grooved couplings. Still, he struggled for a few seconds before realizing he was trying to twist it clockwise.

    Finally the hose came undone. Nothing came out. Not even a drop.

    A seal, he realized. There had to be some sort of seal. Something was trapping the fluid inside. He pushed a finger up into the hole. It was blocked by a slick, rubbery sheet.

    The banging stopped.

    Reggie poked his head around the end of the tank and nearly screamed.

    The caveman was once again feeling around the jagged metal of the hatch. The gash now ran almost to the hatch bottom.

    Its huge, knotted fingers abruptly pulled the hinged part of the hatch, tearing through the remaining aluminum.

    Reggie ducked back beneath the tank and jammed his thumb up against the rubber seal with all the force he could manage. He gasped as his flimsy thumbnail bowed back, tearing away from the flesh. His gasp became a shout when the seal gave and the brine solution washed over the exposed flesh. He pushed harder.

    When the tiles were soaked, he found a thick cable wrapped in black insulation. Power cable. He pulled on it. Nothing. He pulled again.

    The sound of twisting metal from the hatch had stopped.

    The caveman was stuck. Or it had given up. Or managed to hurt itself and was reconsidering coming into the cabin.

    Reggie had to know.

    Moving as little as possible, he turned his head toward the hatch.

    And screamed.

    The caveman was in the cabin with him.

    Its head was pressed to the tiled floor. It stared at him and grinned a wicked, twisted grin, like it was all some sort of sick joke.

    Reggie yanked at the cable again, and this time it came free.

    He dropped it into the brine solution, made sure the copper wire in the center was contacting the fluid, then stood.

    The caveman stood, too.

    It was huge, easily over seven feet—a giant to Reggie’s 5’ 8" wiry frame—with broad shoulders that were terribly out of human proportion. Its head was oversized, and its thick arms stretched to its knees. No definition on its muscles, though, probably from bad diet and poor form during training. The axe was nowhere to be seen, replaced by a spear that seemed small in its huge hands. Not a well-designed spear, but what might be a chipped stone head affixed to a wooden pole. A deadly enough weapon.

    Reggie placed his hands on the far end of the hibernation tank, just inside the lid hinge and away from the big brute.

    Arda, that power I requested?

    Yes?

    Reggie hauled himself on top of the tank. His sneakers were slick with brine and slipped on the rubbery seals covering the raised edges. He windmilled his arms. So soon after waking, it felt like walking a tightrope.

    I need it now. Whatever you can spare without risking the awakening process.

    The caveman leaned forward on huge, bare feet and cocked its oversized head. Then the mouth contorted from a smile to a sneer and he raised the spear.

    One oversized foot slipped forward into the brine solution, then stopped and pulled back.

    Power is being re-routed.

    A hum filled the cabin, along with a strange smell.

    The massive head looked downward. It frowned, and the broad nose sniffed.

    But it didn’t move forward. It stood short of the electrified solution.

    Reggie laughed. Ha! Ha! Whatever the hell you are, how you like that? Huh?

    The thing looked up and cocked its giant head again. Its broad brow wrinkled, and its huge, dark eyes flashed with menace.

    Reggie extended a middle finger at the thing. Come and get—

    The spear thrust forward.

    And the sharp, stone head slid into Reggie’s gut.

    The impact took the wind out of him and knocked him backward off the lid and beyond the tank. He crashed to the floor, barely aware that he’d missed the pool of electric death. Blood gurgled up from a tear in his suit, and numbness spread through his abdomen. His vision blurred. It seemed like he should hurt more...was he still in hibernation, dreaming the whole thing? Or maybe it was a simulation after all. Maybe he’d found a new way to fail.

    A strange coughing sound came from somewhere in the cabin. Laughter. Pretty fucked-up for a simulation.

    He was going to file a protest, definitely.

    When he woke up.

    After all the numbness and darkness went away...

    Chapter Four

    It was like coming out of hibernation again, except that it wasn’t.

    Reggie’s eyes fluttered open as a groan drifted up from somewhere deep in his throat, but the sound was lost in a strange background hum. He felt detached, like he was floating, surrounded by darkness, but there were pools of faint light around him. His nose twitched at the scent of alcohol—rubbing, not the kind that could drown out pain. It dawned on him that he was lying down on something firm and somewhat uncomfortable.

    Someone stepped from the darkness to his left. Female. Human. Like him. She was a little shorter than him, with greasy, dark hair in an overgrown pageboy cut. Her coveralls clung enough to highlight wide hips and a slight paunch. Not fat, but not fit. He had a quick memory of asking the woman to join him for some FlashFit and her pulling a candy bar out of a pocket and biting into it while her pale lips were curled in a cruel, dismissive sneer.

    Irvin. Barbara Irvin. Barb, she would remind him, if he called her otherwise.

    Medical technician, former Navy Corpsman. Thorn in his side. Not his choice for the project, but not really her choice, either.

    Well, he made it. She sounded disappointed, her voice slightly raspy. He reached for his gut, and her dark eyes slitted. You mess up the work I did patching you—I’ll break your fingers.

    He relaxed and held up a hand in surrender.

    Someone joined her. Reggie recognized the man immediately: Pete Franz, Security Chief. Tall, lanky, with weathered skin that hugged prominent cheekbones and sank into the deep hollows beneath. He’d been a primary pick for the project, a Marine Corps officer. No-nonsense. Tough. He crossed his arms over his narrow chest. His coveralls were tight by choice, like his outfits at work. The look was professional, reassuring. His washed-out gray eyes seemed full of concern as they looked Reggie up and down, but that was inconsistent with what seemed like an almost whimsical smirk.

    Mr. Lee. You mind telling the rest of us what this is all about?

    Two more people approached: a black woman with a slightly hooked nose that didn’t really do much to diminish her good looks, and a woman with almost coppery skin, a broad nose, and strong chin.

    He recognized the black woman immediately as Denise Cochran. He’d almost passed her over for the project despite all her qualifications and her staggering physique. He never cared for the idea of having a psychologist as part of the group, but there would have to be at least one on any deep space mission, and she was respected at Frontierza. Plus, she had a military background. He couldn’t remember anything more about her than that she’d done a tour in the Army.

    The other woman didn’t register. She considered him with a dour, glum look.

    She must be Christian Rios, the addition.

    Reggie turned to Pete. I remember...

    The giant caveman’s misshapen head and vicious smile suddenly came back to Reggie.

    He yelped, "The giant thing!"

    Pete held a hand up. Dead. Smells like you cooked it.

    The electricity. Reggie relaxed, then he realized there were only three of his team with him. Four counting the mystery woman. The others? Where are they? I told Arda to choose ten people.

    Barb turned from one of the machines that was providing light. They’re alive. She made a sour face as she powered the machine down. Why only ten?

    Arda said we only had… Reggie gulped. He’d killed part of his team.

    Pete twisted slightly and shook his head. The signal seemed intended for Barb, but Reggie caught it. It seemed like Pete was telling Barb to let it go. That wasn’t her strong suit.

    Mr. Lee... The security chief’s eyes flicked to Denise and the other woman as he hooked an index finger over his chin. There are a lot of questions and damned few answers.

    "I know. I know!"

    More lights shut off and the humming in the room faded as the power running the machines failed.

    Where are we? This looks like the infirmary.

    Barb stepped closer, shaking a plastic stick that took on a green, fluorescent glow. For all the good it’s going to do us without power.

    A dull thudding in Reggie’s skull was making it nearly impossible to think. But he had to update the team on what he knew. The reactor’s offline. Arda said something took the windmill and solar panel farms offline, too. Maybe that big thing did it. Shit. Arda said Marissa Ortiz, Susan Tyler, and Perry Goodwin’s hibernation tanks all suffered catastrophic failure.

    Something broke into them, Mr. Lee. Pete sounded perplexed. Mr. Robbins’s, too. No sign of their bodies.

    Reggie squeezed his eyes shut. Yeah, Arda said Dale died during the hibernation process.

    Pete jabbed a finger toward Reggie. Arda also said it’s been more than fifty years since we went into hibernation. You know anything about that?

    Fifty... Reggie blinked. Fifty years didn’t seem possible.

    For a second he toyed with the idea of it all being a simulation again. Then the wound throbbed.

    The woman Reggie didn’t recognize—Rios—pointedly turned toward Pete with her back toward Reggie. Pete, we need to get to the surface, maybe find a radio out there. Isn’t there a garage with vehicles or something?

    Pete’s eyes closed. Ms. Rios, my job is to ensure the safety of the team. We need to assess the situation. We’re not going anywhere until we know there aren’t any more of those things roaming around inside the complex.

    Heat flashed along Reggie’s cheeks. Excuse me? Ma’am? I’m afraid I don’t recall you being on my team?

    Or in charge of it.

    Rios glanced over her shoulder. That’s because I wasn’t.

    Then how... When did you get in here?

    I was inserted after the extension. A month after you were inserted. She turned her attention back to Pete. We need to get word to Frontierza that something has gone very wrong. I don’t believe Arda’s claim fifty years passed, and I don’t—

    Extension? Was that legal? What bureaucrat had approved that? The same one who had put this Rios in, probably. But she seemed to be talking about a different extension than the fifty year one. She was trying to worsen the confusion.

    "Ms. Rios, it looks like I might need to remind you that I’m the project manager. This is my team. Any planning should go through me. Reggie sat up and started to slide off the treatment bed but realized that might be a bad idea based on Barb’s glare. He had to get control of the situation. Pete, if you could fill me in on what you know, please? What’s this extension? And who else was Arda able to wake?"

    Pete twisted his shoulders left and right for a few seconds—he had a strong core, even if he never took part in FlashFit with the team—and the finger hooked over his chin scratched at the cleft. His eyes finally settled on Rios, even while he was facing Reggie. We got Ms. Wilde, Mr. Ashburn, Mr. Johnson, Mr. Boone, Mr. Diller, and Dr. Cruz.

    Reggie considered his entire roster: a doctor, two technicians, a med-tech, two security specialists, two construction engineers, a psychologist, and Rios. And him. It could have been worse.

    And what do you do, exactly, Ms. Rios?

    I’m a DoD auditor. Rios glared down at him.

    An auditor, not another manager sent in to take control. He was safely in charge. Well, I’m glad Arda woke you.

    Denise coughed and stepped closer, almost as if she were protecting Rios. The extension Ms. Rios mentioned was a decision made by Frontierza and the government to extend our hibernation.

    By a month? That was what Rios had said. And she didn’t believe Arda’s claim about fifty years.

    Fifty years!

    It was in the contract. One of the ubiquitous and vague ‘and other contingencies as determined by Frontierza and the Department of Defense’ clauses. Denise cocked her head. You do remember those, I assume?

    Of course. He’d skimmed the contract—mainly focusing on the sections covering his bonus.

    Denise looked from Reggie to Rios...and then to Pete. We’re minutes away from losing power, and we’ve suffered several fatalities. Something not even human appears to be responsible. I believe that should be sufficient to reset how we assess the situation?

    Reggie cleared his throat. We need a staff meeting. He suddenly felt dizzy and swayed on the treatment bed. To get everyone on the same page. Determine our resources, pool our knowledge.

    He suddenly felt the age difference between him and the others. Pete was middle-aged, Denise and Barb in their thirties. Rios seemed like she might be as well. None of them had any leadership training.

    Pete rubbed at his chin for a few seconds, then shrugged. Everyone should be finished securing the hatches soon. They’ll come back here when they’re done.

    Good. Reggie felt the eyes of the others resting on him. They had all the practical experience and training, but they needed someone to lead them.

    It was all about survival now.

    Chapter Five

    Barb helped Reggie off the treatment bed as the others filtered in from the passageway. He instantly recognized Rocky Boone and Malik Johnson. They were an odd pair, Malik with his warm brown skin and normally shaved scalp darkened by short, black curls starting at the crown, and Rocky with his dark blond hair that was so thick it looked like a piece of carpet glued to his pale, pink skin. Rocky was the taller of the two, but not by much. He was bulky. Malik was all lean sinew and grace, easily believable as a former bodyguard. Reggie had sparred with both during a self-defense course, and he couldn’t honestly say which was more intimidating. Then came Javier Cruz—Dr. Cruz. His olive skin seemed particularly ghoulish in the glow stick light, which caught the silver streaks in his short, black hair in just the right way to make it seem streaked with green. His appearance was worsened by the fact that he was an odd, unlikeable guy to begin with, pushed onto the team by senior leadership. Sean Ashburn followed. Tall, lanky, golden-brown, with big eyes. He was absorbed in wiping grease from his afro.

    And Tuesday Wilde, with her intoxicating smile. She was so close to his ideal—blond, trim and athletic, and gifted with the sort of sharply formed lips that looked like a CGI artist’s fantasy.

    It took Reggie a moment to realize he hadn’t seen Mark Diller, the junior construction engineer.

    The infirmary air was thick and foul. It was meant to hold two patients, a doctor, and a med-tech; now it held ten people fresh from hibernation. They all smelled like they’d just climbed from a stinking swamp. In the green fluorescence of glow sticks, they looked sickly. Reggie certainly felt that way himself.

    He could barely manage a painful shuffle. The spear thrust had missed everything but muscle, which was either pure luck or a sign of an insanely precise strike. The squeak of his sneakers on the floor tiles was the only sound in the cramped cabin. Everyone else sat on beds or leaned against the walls, most with arms crossed, watching him sullenly.

    He knew the look from far too many previous meetings; he needed to get the proceedings started.

    He spread his legs and crossed his arms.

    Where’s Mark? Reggie looked from Pete to Rocky, the other construction engineer, then back again.

    Pete gave an annoyingly nonchalant shrug without unhooking his index finger from his chin. He was with Mr. Ashburn, checking the Secondary Access Module. He looked at Rocky, Mark’s supervisor. Mr. Boone, if you would retrieve your team member?

    Rocky pushed his powerful frame up from the end of the bed Reggie had been treated on, glaring resentfully, probably at having to leave Tuesday’s side. She patted his shoulder and offered a pouty frown and cocked head with twinkling eyes that carried a hopeful smile. It was one of her trademark looks, a false assurance that everything would be okay. As far as Reggie knew, she could pluck those looks from thin air at will. Knowing she was fake and manipulative didn’t make it any easier to shrug off her influence.

    Reggie held up a hand. Rocky. Don’t go alone.

    He scanned his team and settled on Malik, the perfect balance for someone like Rocky—speed and calm to counter power and impulsiveness. Even after hibernation, they both looked good in their coveralls.

    Malik straightened from where he’d been leaning against the wall, flashed a pleasant smile, and waved for Rocky to take the lead.

    Before they could head out, the hatch bar turned with a metallic clang and the hatch swung in.

    Mark stepped through, doughy face creased in surprise at all the people staring at him. What?

    Where have you been? Reggie asked.

    I had to take a dump. I told Sean I was going to be a couple minutes. Mark looked at the scrawny technician. Way to cover for me, dude.

    Sean stopped wiping grease from his afro for a second. Normally puffy, it looked like a wet poodle. That was more than a couple minutes, Mark.

    Mark’s pasty skin seemed to darken in the green glow. Yeah, well, I couldn’t get anything to come out.

    There’s nothing to come out, Barb said. It’s like phantom pains. Phantom poop. You’re fine.

    "Doesn’t feel fine. I could eat a moose’s ass right about now." Mark settled on the bed next to Tuesday, who touched his thick forearm and gave him a look that said she’d missed him dearly. He smiled.

    Rocky’s head jerked a signal to get off the bed, and Mark’s smile disappeared.

    Rocky settled back beside Tuesday, who pressed close against him as lifelong lovers might. Mark leaned against an open spot on the wall near the bed and fixed his sullen eyes on Reggie. It was typical behavior for Mark, blaming management.

    Now that we’re all here, we can get started. The old trick of redirecting hostility to the person responsible for the delay seemed to work. A few people shifted their glares toward Mark. I wanted to get everyone together so we could assess the situation and evaluate our options. Pete, if you could start?

    Pete tapped a fingernail against his front teeth, then seemed to catch himself slouching. He straightened and dropped his hands to his sides. Might as well start with the hard news. We got eleven survivors out of twenty-one in hibernation. Five missing bodies, five thawing corpses. He glanced at Reggie. Need to deal with those at some point.

    Sean’s skinny arm shot up. Excuse me. What killed them?

    No way to know for sure the five missing people are dead, Pete said. But their hibernation tanks were broken open, and they didn’t have the waking process run. I don’t know how long you can be outside a tank and survive. Dr. Cruz?

    Barb scowled and cut the doctor off before he could speak. Not long. You’ve got what amounts to saline slush in your circulatory system, which is only okay if you’re cold enough to have all your organs completely shut down. Cells start to erupt once you thaw.

    Dr. Cruz looked up from where he’d been hunched over a piece of lab equipment. His heavy eyebrows arched. She’s right. Maybe a half hour in these temperatures. An hour at most. It’s a miracle we can survive the process at all, and that’s only under perfect conditions. The human body is so fascinating yet fragile.

    Reggie felt like he should say something to at least try to defend the company. Keep in mind that’s nearly a sixty percent survival rate after being under for fifty years. The technology delivered.

    Everyone fixed him with hostile glares again.

    He held up both hands. Look, I know you’re angry. We’re all upset about this, and we’re all struggling with the aftereffects of the fast-wake Arda had to use to save our lives.

    Mark’s face darkened again, and he dragged thick fingers through his patchy beard. Why didn’t the system wake us when we were scheduled to? Fifty years instead of one month? Seriously?

    Pete shrugged and stepped back, signaling his part in the briefing was done. He glanced at Reggie in what felt like a clear attempt to refocus everyone’s hostility.

    Reggie’s stomach growled. He wanted to pin everything on Rios, but that didn’t seem fair or productive. We have to get power restored before we can figure out what happened. That means figuring out—

    Denise cleared her throat. I’m curious how we were selected as survivors.

    Arda made the selections.

    Denise was setting him up for something. He could see it in her body language: leaning against a wall, one arm crossed beneath her heavy breasts, head jutting forward slightly and tilted just so. He’d seen the look before with her. It always came just before she revealed a trap.

    He picked his words carefully. I gave parameters based on the threat I knew of. Something had breached security and killed some of our teammates.

    So you chose people with a military background? Denise’s voice was still cool.

    I don’t remember if I said military or just weapons qualified. Reggie felt dampness on his back and under his arms. He hated being questioned. Uh, health, self-defense. I think that was the extent of it. Something was trying to break into my cabin at that time, so I can’t be sure. Do you have a problem with Arda’s selections?

    Denise closed her eyes. No. We lost a scientist and more experienced leadership, that’s all.

    Rocky snorted. I know I’m okay with being alive. Hell, it’s not like that experienced leadership would’ve helped any against something like what you killed, Reggie.

    Reginald. Reggie bristled at Rocky’s lack of respect. Protocols needed to be followed. It was typical disregard from Rocky, who had problems with authority figures.

    Rocky looked at Cruz. What was that thing anyway, Doc?

    Reggie’s cheeks felt hot. He watched for a reaction from Pete but didn’t even notice a flinch.

    Cruz hummed under his breath. It’s impossible to be sure. I lack access to advanced biological research equipment in my lab, even if we had power. However, based off a cursory examination of the corpse, it appears human. If pressed, I would speculate the possibility of influence of European early modern human DNA based on the shoulder breadth, eyes, and the teeth.

    Early modern human? Rocky looked around the room. What the hell’s that mean?

    Cro-Magnon, Barb said. We were attacked by a giant caveman.

    Reggie’s eyebrows arched. He’d been right.

    Malik cocked his head and squinted an eye shut. Wait. A caveman just shows up and tries to kill us? How the hell do you explain that? Sounds like pretty bad science to me.

    Cruz slowly shook his head. He seemed to grimace, but the smug look in his eyes was...off, so the whole thing came across like he was trying to hide a smile. Or maybe he wasn’t, and it was just the mystery behind his hiring that had Reggie imagining things.

    Frankly, I haven’t the slightest idea, Cruz said.

    Nuclear blast, Sean suddenly blurted out. When everyone looked at him, he tried to shove his hands into rear pockets that the coveralls didn’t have. It would explain a lot, if you think about it. I mean, why else would they leave us down here fifty years? Some lunatic starts the final war, and everyone’s gone, and now there’s mutants running around.

    A condescending smile slowly crept across Cruz’s face. Outside of sophomoric entertainment media, I’m afraid mutations don’t work that way.

    Sean put his hands behind his back. Well, it would still explain everything.

    Explanations without a basis in fact hold little value, now, don’t they? Cruz’s smile spread wider.

    Then maybe it’s all a big computer simulation. Roko’s basilisk.

    Cruz’s smile became just a little bit less smug, and his brow wrinkled. Roko’s basilisk?

    The idea is basically that an AI would create copies of you over and over and torture them. It’s all an assumption built around how an AI would behave. Help it out, it leaves you alone. Don’t help it out, it—

    Cruz chuckled and waved; the condescending smile was back in full. "Thought experiments. I understand now. I assume you have heard of Occam’s razor? Practical scientists don’t really have much use for philosophical quandaries."

    Sean seemed to shrink in on himself. Oh yeah? Then what makes more sense?

    More sense than radioactive wasteland mutants? Cruz chuckled. Well, to begin with, geneticists have been toying with cloning Cro-Magnon DNA for decades. In practice, it shouldn’t take much. Buy eggs from a donor, insert the DNA, make some changes, and you have our giant friend there.

    In the middle of the Nevada desert? On top of this complex? That’s your idea of the simplest explanation? Sean snorted loudly.

    Sean was just a tech speaking to a much more educated professional. His rebuttal set everyone to murmuring.

    Reggie raised a hand. "All right. Let’s stop the chatter, please. Whatever this thing was, it’s dead now. We know that our priorities are to get power restored so we can contact Frontierza. Barring that, we need to make our way to some place with communication. Pete, can we improvise some weapons?"

    I can look into it.

    Let’s make that the top priority, then. Reggie turned to his techs. Sean, Tuesday, what’s it going to take to get the reactor running?

    What? Sean recoiled. It’s a fusion reactor. We’re not qualified to mess with that, not without Arda.

    Tuesday shifted sinuously, snake-like, and put on a smirk. I could give it a look, assuming we can get in. Isn’t the access tunnel sealed off?

    Despite himself, Reggie felt drawn in by her condescension. Thanks, Tuesday. We’ll get you the lock code. Malik, could you go with her when she checks the reactor out?

    Malik stiffened. Is it radioactive?

    Don’t worry, Tuesday said. Her voice was honey-sweet and reassuring. It should be safe.

    Then we’re good.

    All right, then. Reggie clapped his hands together. So those are the priorities: weapons, the reactor—oh, and Sean, could you check out why we’re not getting power from the solar and windmill farms?

    Sean’s jaw dropped. Alone? Go outside the complex?

    The Secondary Access Module exit should be safe. Reggie looked at Pete for reassurance; he nodded. The security breach was through the Primary Access Module.

    "You want Malik to go along with Tuesday to the reactor, which can only be reached from inside the complex, but I have to go outside alone? We don’t even know what time it is up there."

    Reggie sighed. Fine, take Mark. We need power, Sean.

    The skinny tech let out an exasperated groan.

    I got ya, buddy. Mark winked. Cover for you just like you did me.

    Reggie watched for a reaction from Denise and the auditor, Rios. Neither seemed to challenge his decision. All right. That’s the agenda, people. We stay in pairs, we stay sharp, and we try to get an understanding of what’s going on. I’ll be in the Command Module. We can use the intercom while there’s still some battery power left. Let’s go.

    They filtered out.

    Reggie noted who paired with whom as they exited the cabin—Pete and the Rios woman; Barb and Denise. Rocky trailed after Malik and Tuesday. Cruz lingered in the passageway a moment before wandering alone into his lab.

    Their lack of urgency was disappointing. Sean’s fear was troubling, if understandable. No one had signed on for sleeping decades of their lives away, and no one could have expected a caveman would break into their little experimental home.

    But fear wouldn’t keep them alive. They needed to be bold and decisive. Something had gone wrong with the world outside, Reggie was sure of that. He just hoped it was something they could survive.

    Chapter Six

    As bad as the air had been in the infirmary, it was ten times worse in the Command Module. Warmer. Fouler. The dead giant’s stench floated up from below. Reggie had placed a blanket over the open hatchway and set two glow sticks on top as warning markers. He wouldn’t be comfortable until the caveman’s corpse was gone, though. Subconsciously, he wasn’t convinced the thing was dead.

    He paced, scratching at the greasy substance in his hair, listening for any sound beyond the squeak of his sneakers on the floor. He squeezed fingers through the hole in his coveralls and rubbed at the wound the spear had left. The spray skin covering the wound was slick, the wound

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