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Cover
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Title Page
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Prologue
Section I
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Section II
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
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Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Section III
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Section IV
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
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Chapter Twenty-nine
Section V
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Thirty-two
Chapter Thirty-three
Chapter Thirty-four
Chapter Thirty-five
Chapter Thirty-six
Chapter Thirty-seven
Section VI
Epilogue
Praise forHALO: The Fall of Reach
Copyright
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HALO
THE FALL OF REACH
Eric Nylund
A Del Rey(R)Book
THE BALLANTINE PUBLISHING GROUP * NEW YORK
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For Syne Mitchell. She watched my six, patched me up, and provided transportation to my DZ everyday—no soldier could ever ask for better support in the field . . . or a better wife.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Singled out for conspicuous merit and bravery under fire are the following personnel:
Eric S. Trautmann went far above and beyond the call of duty providing background material, editing,reality checks, and a constant supply of caffeine and encouragement.
Bungie for making a superb game, and in particular: Jason Jones, Alex Seropian, John Howard, andLorraine McLees.
The brilliant tactical unit at Microsoft’s Franchise Development Group: Nancy Figatner, Brannon Boren,and Doug Zartman.
Microsoft’s User Experience fireteam: Keith Cirillo, Jo Tyo, and Matt Whiting.
The troopers at Ballantine/Del Rey: Caron Harris, David Stevenson, Steve Palmer, Crystal Velasquez—and special thanks to Steve Saffel.
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PROLOGUE
0500 Hours, February 12, 2535 (Military Calendar) / Lambda Serpentis System, Jericho VIITheaterof Operations
“Contact. All teams stand by: enemy contact, my position.”
The Chief knew there were probably more than a hundred of them—motion sensors were off the scale.He wanted to see them for himself, though; his training made that lesson clear: “Machines break. Eyesdon’t.”
The four Spartans that composed Blue Team covered his back, standing absolutely silent and immobilein their MJOLNIR combat armor. Someone had once commented that they looked like Greek war godsin the armor . . . but his Spartans were far more effective and ruthless than Homer’s gods had ever been.
He snaked the fiber-optic probe up and over the three-meter-high stone ridge. When it was in place, theChief linked it to his helmet’s heads-up display.
On the other side he saw a valley with eroded rock walls and a river meandering through it . . . andcamped along the banks as far as he could see were Grunts.
The Covenant used these stocky aliens as cannon fodder. They stood a meter tall and wore armoredenvironment suits that replicated the atmosphere of their frozen homeworld. They reminded the Chief ofbiped dogs, not only in appearance, but because their speech—even with the new translation software—was an odd combination of high-pitched squeaks, guttural barks, and growls.
They were about as smart as dogs, too. But what they lacked in brainpower, they made up for in sheertenacity. He had seen them hurl themselves at their enemies until the ground was piled high with theircorpses . . . and their opponents had depleted their ammunition.
These Grunts were unusually well armed: needlers, plasma pistols, and there were four stationaryplasma cannons. Those could be a problem.
One other problem: there were easily a thousand of them.
This operation had to go off without a hitch. Blue Team’s mission was to draw out the Covenant rearguard and let Red Team slip through in the confusion. Red Team would then plant a HAVOK tactical
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nuke. When the next Covenant ship landed, dropped its shields, and started to unload its troops, they’dget a thirty-megaton surprise.
The Chief detached the optics and took a step back from the rock wall. He passed the tacticalinformation along to his team over a secure COM channel.
“Four of us,” Blue-Two whispered over the link. “And a thousand of them? Piss-poor odds for the littleguys.”
“Blue-Two,” the Chief said, “I want you up with those Jackhammer launchers. Take out the cannons andsoften the rest of them. Blue-Three and Five, you follow me up—we’re on crowd control. Blue-Four:you get the welcome mat ready. Understood?”
Four blue lights winked on his heads-up display as his team acknowledged the orders.
“On my mark.” The Chief crouched and readied himself. “Mark!”
Blue-Two leaped gracefully atop the ridge—three meters straight up. There was no sound as the half tonof MJOLNIR armor and Spartan landed on the limestone.
She hefted one launcher and ran along the ridge—she was the fastest Spartan on the Chief’s team. Hewas confident those Grunts wouldn’t be able to track her for the three seconds she’d be exposed. Inquick succession, Blue-Two emptied both of the Jackhammer’s tubes, dropped one launcher, and thenfired the other rockets just as fast. The shells streaked into the Grunts’ formation and detonated. One ofthe stationary guns flipped over, engulfed in the blast, and the gunner was flung to the ground.
She ditched the launcher, jumped down—rolled once—and was back on her feet, running at top speed tothe fallback point.
The Chief, Blue-Three, and Blue-Five leaped to the top of the ridge. The Chief switched to infrared tocut through the clouds of dust and propellant exhaust just in time to see the second salvo ofJackhammers strike their targets. Two consecutive blossoms of flash, fire, and thunder decimated thefront ranks of the Grunt guards, and most importantly, turned the last of the plasma cannons intosmoldering wreckage.
The Chief and the others opened fire with their MA5B assault rifles—a full automatic spray of fifteenrounds per second. Armor-piercing bullets tore into the aliens, breaching their environment suits andsparking the methane tanks they carried. Gouts of flame traced wild arcs as the wounded Grunts ran inconfusion and pain.
Finally the Grunts realized what was happening—and where this attack was coming from. Theyregrouped and chargeden masse . An earthquake vibration coursed through the ground and shook the
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porous stone beneath the Chief’s boots.
The three Spartans exhausted their AP clips and then, in unison, switched to shredder rounds. They firedinto the tide of creatures as they surged forward. Line after line of them dropped. Scores more justtrampled their fallen comrades.
Explosive needles bounced off the Chief’s armor, detonating as they hit the ground. He saw the flash ofa plasma bolt—side stepped—and heard the air crackle where he had stood a split second before.
“Inbound Covenant air support,”Blue-Four reported over the COM link. “ETA is two minutes, Chief.”
“Roger that,” he said. “Blue-Three and -Five: maintain fire for five seconds, then fall back. Mark!”
Their status lights winked once, acknowledging his order.
The Grunts were three meters from the wall. The Chief tossed two grenades. He, Blue-Three, and Blue-Five stepped backward off the ridge, landed, spun, and ran.
Two dull thumps reverberated though the ground. The squeals and barks of the incoming Grunts,however, drowned out the noise of the exploding grenades.
The Chief and his team sprinted up the half-kilometer sandstone slope in thirty-two seconds flat. The hillended abruptly—a sheer drop of two hundred meters straight into the ocean.
Blue-Four’s voice crackled over the COM channel: “Welcome mat is laid out, Chief. Ready when youare.”
The Grunts looked like a living carpet of steel-blue skin, claws, and chrome weapons. Some ran on allfours up the slope. They barked and howled, baying for the Spartans’ blood.
“Roll out the carpet,” the Chief told Blue-Four.
The hill exploded—plumes of pulverized sandstone and fire and smoke hurtled skyward.
The Spartans had buried a spiderweb pattern of Lotus antitank mines earlier that morning.
Sand and bits of metal pinged off of the Chief’s helmet.
The Chief and his team opened fire again, picking off the remaining Grunts that were still alive andstruggling to stand.
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His motion detector flashed a warning. There were incoming projectiles high at two o’clock—velocitiesat over a hundred kilometers per hour.
Five Covenant Banshee fliers appeared over the ridge.
“New contacts. All teams, open fire!” he barked.
The Spartans, without hesitation, fired on the alien fliers. Bullet hits pinged from the fliers’ chitinousarmor—it would take a very lucky shot to take out the antigrav pods on the end of the craft’s stubbymeter-long “wings.”
The fire got the aliens’ attention, however. Lances of fire slashed from the Banshees’ gunports.
The Chief dove and rolled to his feet. Sandstone exploded where he had stood only an instant before.Globules of molten glass sprayed the Spartans.
The Banshees screamed over their heads—then banked sharply for another pass.
“Blue-Three, Blue-Five: Theta Maneuver,” the Chief called out.
Blue-Three and -Five gave him the thumbs-up signal.
They regrouped at the edge of the cliff and clipped onto the steel cables that dangled down the length ofthe rock wall.
“Did you set up the fougasses with fire or shrapnel?” the Chief asked.
“Both,” Blue-Three replied.
“Good.” The Chief grabbed the detonators. “Cover me.”
The fougasses were never meant to take down flying targets; the Spartans had put them there to mop upthe Grunts. In the field, though, you had to improvise. Another tenet of their training: adapt or die.
The Banshees formed into a “flying V” and swooped toward them, almost brushing the ground.
The Spartans opened fire.
Bolts of superheated plasma from the Banshees punctuated the air.
The Chief dodged to the right, then to the left; he ducked. Their aim was getting better.
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The Banshees were one hundred meters away, then fifty meters. Their plasma weapons might recyclefast enough to get another shot . . . and at this range, the Chief wouldn’t be dodging.
The Spartans jumped backward off the cliff—guns still blazing. The Chief jumped, too, and hit thedetonators.
The ten fougasses—each a steel barrel filled with napalm and spent AP and shredder casings—had beenburied a few meters from the edge of the cliff, their mouths angled up at thirty degrees. When thegrenades at the bottom of the barrels exploded, it made one hell of a barbecue out of anything that got intheir way.
The Spartans slammed into the side of the cliff—the steel cables they were attached to twanged taut.
A wave of heat and pressure washed over them. A heartbeat later five flaming Banshees hurtled overtheir heads, leaving thick trails of black smoke as they arced into the water. They splashed down, thenvanished beneath the emerald waves. The Spartans hung there a moment, waiting and watching withtheir assault rifles trained on the water.
No survivors surfaced.
They rappelled down to the beach and rendezvoused with Blue-Two and -Four.
“Red Team reports mission objective achieved, Chief,” Blue-Two said. “They send their compliments.”
“It’s hardly going to balance the scales,” Blue-Three muttered, and kicked the sand. “Not like thoseGrunts when they slaughtered the 105th Drop Jet Platoon. They should suffer just as much as those guysdid.”
The Chief had nothing to say to that. It wasn’t his job to make things suffer—he was just here to winbattles. Whatever it took.
“Blue-Two,” the Chief said. “Get me an uplink.”
“Aye aye.” She patched him into the SATCOM system.
“Mission accomplished, Captain de Blanc,” the Chief reported. “Enemy neutralized.”
“Excellent news,”the Captain said. He sighed, and added, “But we’re pulling you out, Chief.”
“We’re just getting warmed up down here, sir.”
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“Well, it’s a different story up here. Move out for pickup ASAP.”
“Understood, sir.” The Chief killed the uplink. He told his team, “The party’s over, Spartans. Dust-off infifteen.”
They jogged double-quick up the ten kilometers of the beach, and returned to their dropship—a Pelican,scuffed and dented from three days’ hard fighting. They boarded and the ship’s engines whined to life.
Blue-Two took off her helmet and scratched the stubble of her brown hair. “It’s a shame to leave thisplace,” she said, and leaned against the porthole. “There are so few left.”
The Chief stood by her and glanced out as they lifted into the air—there were wide rolling plains ofpalmgrass, the green expanse of ocean, a wispy band of clouds in the sky, and setting red suns.
“There will be other places to fight for,” he said.
“Will there?” she whispered.
The Pelican ascended rapidly through the atmosphere, the sky darkened, and soon only stars surroundedthem.
In orbit, there were dozens of frigates, destroyers, and two massive carriers. Every ship had carbonscoring and holes peppering their hulls. They were all maneuvering to break orbit.
They docked in the port bay of the UNSC destroyerResolute . Despite being surrounded by two metersof titanium-A battle plate and an array of modern weapons, the Chief preferred to have his feet on theground, with real gravity, and real atmosphere to breathe—a place where he was in control, and wherehis life wasn’t held in the hands of anonymous pilots. A ship just wasn’t home.