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Fallen by Christopher Stires





<<DISTRESS PROBE LAUNCHED>>
Dev slumped back in the grass under the twisted, scorched wing of
his scoutship as the probe arched upward into the sky. The simple exercise had
exhausted him and the throbbing in his legs--the right far worse than the left
if that was possible--continued to burn. At least the liquid anodyne was
working. He'd be shrieking by now and grabbing for the suicide needle if it
wasn't. His legs had been shattered in the crash and he knew, without doubt,
that the bones had been crushed beyond med-mending. He would be walking on
synthetic limbs for the remainder of his life.

If the convoy found him.

Dev had deviated from his assigned quadrant and, when he did, he
disconnected the scoutship's tracking unit. Captain Asher had verbally
reprimanded him after his last mission for the same breach in procedure.
Despite the consequences, which would result at least in a written reprimand in
his official bio and quite possibly in a reduction in his rank and pay, he had
disobeyed the order again. He had no choice. None whatsoever. Last term, in
special session, the Tygriis Council had awarded him his third G'honn Cluster.
This was for his solo over the Hyddekell dwarf-sphere. The G'honn, in twenty
generations, had only been awarded sixty-two times and most had been
posthumously. The legendary outrider Hav-il-ah had received three during her
lifetime and now Dev was tied with her record. The Tygriis information nets
were filled with speculation if he would break the record and be the most
decorated in history. The professional gamblers in Pys were taking wagers on
his success or failure. A net entertainment agent had contacted him about a
semi-fictional series based on his scouting adventures. No, a tie would not do
and following procedure would not lead to a fourth.

Slowly, ever so slowly, he elbowed himself upright and surveyed the
clearing once more. Tall thick trees, several fruit-bearing it appeared,
surrounded him. His food rations had survived the crash in tact but he would
eventually--if they didn't find him--need to restock and gathering a harvest
from those trees would be a major endeavor. In the distance, not too far beyond
the trees, he heard water running. A stream, he guessed, maybe even a river.
Tomorrow he would have to find it. Fruit and water. It was a start. Fowl flew
in the sky overhead and timid mammals scampered through the woods around him.
He wouldn't be eating meat soon, however. Not unless one dropped, prepped and
cooked, at his feet.

A sharp pain flared along his right leg.

He gritted his teeth and waited for it to ease.

To be honest, he thought, he was lucky to have crashed in this
clearing with its warm climate. On his first pass around the planet, he saw
vast oceans and wide deserts; he saw barren polar caps and dense jungles. He
knew he'd be dead now if he had landed in any of those regions. What he didn't
see on his tour were any cities or towns or nomad tribes. No alien military
platoons would be arriving to take him prisoner. Also there would be no alien
physician treating his injuries. This was a primitive world with no signs of
intelligent life.

Ignoring the throbbing, he chuckled tightly, even with him on this
planet there was no intelligent life.

Stupid-stupid-stupid. He'd dropped lower on his second pass, violating another standing order but better to map-cam the terrain, and he flew straight into a storm. On the other side of the squall, he clipped a mountain peak. The scoutship spiraled end-over-end until he slammed into the clearing.

The ship was beyond repair. It was scattered, except for the pilot
cabin and one wing, across the clearing and deep into the woods. The
com-instruments were destroyed, too. He was shipwrecked on an uncharted island
in the stars.

The pain flare, finally, eased and Dev pulled a nectar tube from his
pack. His mouth and throat were parched and greedily accepted the liquid. He
was going to miss sweet juice drinks more than cold ale, he thought. Don't
think about what you're going to miss.

They will find you.

They have to.

During his last turn-around at Tygriis base, he had proposed to Ve.
He had never considered a world-bound assignment until he met her. Her pale
crimson-toned features and black eyes were mesmerizing. Her scent and taste
were intoxicating. The emotions she stirred within him he had never felt
before. Lust, yes, but this was much more. When Ve teased him about his
vanities and passions, he felt loved not moved to a duel challenge as he had
with others. He wanted to protect her, share with her, learn from her. He had
to be with her again.

They will find you. Asher and crew are the best in the system and
the code dictates that no one is ever left behind.

He tugged the distress unit to him. One probe was left. He had
launched the first at the coordinates where the convoy had been when he last
made voice contact. The second he fired at where he calculated the convoy
should be now. Did it matter though? These probes were designed for
short-range distress alerts and he was far beyond his assigned grid. Launching
them was like throwing a bottle-message into the ocean. It might be found but
the odds were against it.

Dev switched on the unit. He had to try. His other option was
spending the remainder of his life crawling on his belly around this clearing.
That was not acceptable. He was the greatest outrider since Hav-il-ah. No, he
was the greatest outrider--period. Children and storytellers would embellish
his name and deeds for generations to come. He would not be forgotten.

He scrolled the probe display, double-checking its message:

<<THIS IS DEV ILSATAN, OUTRIDER PILOT OF THE SCOUTSHIP EDEN. I HAVE
CRASHED ...>>


The End

Copyright c)2000 Chris Stires

©