Mausoleum 2069 - Mausoleum 2069 Part 2
Library

Mausoleum 2069 Part 2

She reached up, grabbed his hand, and held it to the side of her face. "I missed you last night," she said.

"That's because Jim and I were working late recalibrating the geospheres. We didn't get through until three this morning. I didn't want to bother you."

Geospheres were the ships tethering anchors. There were eight magnetically charged orbs that surrounded the mausoleum and were situated to provide maximum stability by using the magnetic field as mooring lines. If one or two orbs got out of sync, the ship would list and adjustments would have to be made, a time consuming affair.

"I'll be there tonight," he told her softly.

She smiled, then kissed the back of his hand. "You'd better be."

"I will. Promise." He leaned forward and kissed her forehead. "Go help Jen prepare the governor's tomb. I have to finish up on two other burial sites." He gave her another kiss, a small peck on the tip of her nose, and winked at her with his pale-colored eye. "I'll see you later."

He grabbed his tablet and departed the area.

Before going to the governor's proposed site, Sheena went to visit her mother who had been interred on the mausoleum twenty years earlier.

When Sheena Tolbert was six years old, she watched her mother die.

It was evening, about 9 p.m. in New Albuquerque. Her mother was driving the car with her uncle sitting in the passenger seat, and Sheena was in the back seat on the cusp of falling asleep. Her mother and uncle were talking about Sheena, and she was trying to stay awake enough to hear what they were saying about her.

Her mother had told her brother about the pride she felt for her only child and of the indescribable love they shared. Her uncle then responded in a statement Sheena didn't understand at the time. He said: She's very close to you because 'Mother' is the word 'God' to children. She sees you as her champion, her protector, her guide, and her beacon of unconditional love. She gives back what she receives, he told her. It's a love that neither one of you will ever forget no matter what.

And just as the final word left his lips, she heard a warning, the automated voice coming from the vehicle's console of a malfunction in the steering assemblage. The car then veered off the road and crashed into a street lamp. The next thing Sheena remembered was seeing a column of greasy black smoke rising from the heat of a nearby fire.

As she lay there on the street littered with chips of tempered glass, she saw her mother lying in the road with a bloodied hand reaching out to her. Even as her mother stood along the precipice between life and death, she continued to act as her champion despite her entire body becoming a tabernacle of pain as ruined nerve endings forced her to cry out in agony. But she continued to extend her arm until she could reach no more, the light in her eyes finally fading until they were extinguished altogether. And then her hand fell to the ground, her mother having died as a final breath escaped her like the hiss of escaping steam.

All Sheena could do was lay there as her mind grew numb, a child who was too scared to raise a helping hand, even if the attempt proved futile. And it was this moment of recollection on a night so long ago in New Albuquerque that would remain as a stain to her memory.

And though she knew her mother would forgive her, she had yet to forgive herself.

That was twenty years ago.

And as an entrusted employee of the Federation, her mother was buried at Mausoleum 2069.

Sheena stood before the tiers and rows of burial tombs along the walls on the thirteenth level. The stacked vaults ran four rows high and one hundred rows across on both sides of the corridor, with several corridors on each level. It was one of the eighteen decks on the mausoleum where more than 75,000 people had been entombed, and 10,000 chambers were still empty.

Her mother had been buried in a unit that was in the second row from the bottom, twenty-eighth row in. Then, ever so softly, she ran her fingertips over the markings on the wall plate over the script that detailed the beginning and end of her life, as well as the epitaph that read: Loving Mother of Sheena.

Tears welled in her eyes, as they did every time her fingers played over the lettering of the epitaph: Loving Mother of Sheena I'm so sorry, mama. I pray that you can forgive me.

Then she kissed her fingertips and rubbed them across the surface of her mother's wall plate. That act in itself was one of indescribable love. And as often as she repeated this ritual on a daily basis, it was always difficult to say good-bye. Even when a loved one was just an arm's length away.

Pulling herself back with reluctance, Sheena made her way down the corridor, with every footfall echoing off the mausoleum walls until they eventually withered and died away.

In time she would see her mother again.

But she would also see her in a very different state.

When Eriq Wyman was stationed at Camp Coquit as an Elite Force commando in the New Bay Area, he was by all accounts someone with a very particular skill set in the field of combat. In battle against Wasteland savages he was quick and clean, always approaching his quarry like the whisper of wind. And should a savage feel the slenderest breeze against the back of his neck, then it was too late, his life over as Wyman followed through by running a blade across his throat.

He had been a Force Elite for twelve years as a battlefield lieutenant, and served the Federation territories by protecting the New cities from hostile elements considered too close to Elysium walls.

Then one night just outside of New Dallas where the surrounding terrain was a kingdom that only desert scorpions could rule, a band of Wasteland savages had wandered too close to the city, their fires seen from the rampart walls.

And he had been issued an order: Lead your troops to sanitize the area.

In less than five minutes he was leading a convoy of trucks filled with battle-tested men to the beacon points of flame. When they were about a click away from the outskirts of their camp, his team exited the vehicles and set up a perimeter.

The savages were quiet as they sat there looking distant and detached, their faces streaked with dirt and filth as the blaze of the fire reflected off despairing eyes. Hair was severely matted into Gordian tangles. The curves of their cheekbones had been sharpened by emaciation. And for those who did not wear the tattered skins to cover their bodies, racks of ribs were clearly defined against the taut flesh that covered them.

And it was at this point that Wyman had an epiphany.

This group comprising of women and children and very few men weren't savages at all, but people who'd been crazed by hunger.

He recalled the moment he stepped out of the shadows and into the light with whispers of warning calling out to him, his teammates asking him what he was doing. He held the point of his weapon down, the tip of the gun nearly skinning the surface of the desert floor as he made his way toward the fire.

Then all eyes diverted, the savages appraising this man from the darkness.

But no one moved or seemed to care, their spirits wasted.

He saw the overwhelming sadness among their features, could feel it coming off them in waves as if it was something alive. Then he came to a single conclusion: This wasn't the look of crazed beasts. This was the look of complete despair and surrender.

Then he dropped his gun, its impact with the sand coughing up plumes of dust.

He couldn't do to these people what life had already done to them, which was to kill them even though they still stood upon the grounds of a ruined plain.

"What are you doing?" whispered a sergeant, who came up from behind with his weapon targeting those by the fire. "Lieutenant?"

But Wyman ignored him, his eyes fixating on the savages as they began to form a tighter circle, the people now hugging one another for comfort as soldiers emerged from pooling depths of darkness with their assault weapons raised and directed to kill.

"We can't do this," he remembered whispering. "We can't."

"Lieutenant, we have our orders."

"I can't follow through."

"You have to."

Wyman shook his head in marginal sweeps from left to right as his eyes became just as disconnected as those who sat by the fire. "These people intended us no harm."

"Lieutenant, we have our orders. If you do not follow through, then you leave me no choice but to relieve you of command."

At this point Wyman focused his sight on a young girl that was maybe five or six, but certainly no older, who clung to her mother's side for comfort. She offered up a marginal smile, slowly raised her hand, and waved to him. It nearly broke his heart because he knew what was coming next.

So he closed his eyes, hard, but it was not enough as he could still see the muzzle flashes through his lids as his team opened up and killed with impunity.

When all was silent as the smell or cordite filled the air, he finally opened his eyes.

Bodies lay everywhere with contorted limbs reaching skyward. Blood and gore marked the sand. And the young girl, who lay dead on top of her mother, stared at him through accusing eyes for not being able to stop this.

I'm so sorry.

The child remained unmoving.

On the following morning he stood by and watched a bulldozer plow their bodies into an open grave, the seemingly boneless corpses rolling into a hole for which there would never be a marker to commemorate that they had lived at all. It would be one of many unmarked graves throughout the territories not far from Elysium walls.

Subsequently, for his failure to initiate the order to exterminate, he was summarily relieved of duty and dismissed from the corp. The man who was once considered to be a master of killing insurgents with the cold fortitude of a machine, had been reduced to a man without courage by his peers. But as Federation officials considered his past and stellar performance with the Force Elite, he was reinstated to serve as Master Chief aboard Mausoleum 2069, a less than respectable position from what he used to be, but a Federation post, nonetheless.

He stood inside his chamber preparing for the presidential visit. In his hand was a razor-thin tablet listing the necessary protocols and procedures to follow prior to the president's boarding.

And since the protocols were deeply rooted in the ship's maintenance, measures had been developed to reduce any possibility of malfunction that could pose a threat to anyone onboard.

But that was Jim Schott's department as chief engineer, making sure that all systems were well maintained with constant and computerized analysis. If there was an anomaly in the readings, then appropriate actions to right the ship would be taken.

While tracing a finger along the tablet's screen, a call came over his intercom. It was Schott, his voice sounding tinny over the system. "Wyman."

He pushed the intercom button. "Yeah, Jim."

"You need to come to the comm center."

"Why? What's up?"

"There's something you need to see."

"Bad news?"

"I'm not sure."

"I'll be there in a minute."

The system clicked off.

Setting the tablet aside, Eriq Wyman headed for the comm center.

Chapter Seven.

Jim Schott was never gregarious by anyone's standards. But he was a realist.

The last time he had set foot on Earth was seven years ago when he worked as an engineer inside the Field of New Houston. Even then he could see that the city was not the paradise the authorities wanted its people to believe. So as the population grew, so did the demand for food, which put a strain on the aquaponics systems because there were too many mouths to feed and too little fish to supply the need.

So protocols were quickly set: After giving birth to a single child, the procedure of sterilization was mandatory. And it was this particular act that made Schott believe that this was the shot across the bow for the beginning of the end of human freedoms.

Soon other protocols were put in place. Most taking away human rights in order to make paradises like New Houston 'a better place to live.' To go against or voice an opposing opinion was seen as obtrusive to societal values. Therefore, anyone without a conducive viewpoint was banished to the Wastelands.

He also watched good intentions from good-willed politicians turn sour as human nature took over, with selfishness becoming the driving motivator in their lives. And with self-interests came greed. And with greed, corruption.

The Fields of Elysium were temporary answers to a planet that was hemorrhaging its life force on a daily basis and was now on life support.

And as a realist, he saw clearly the truth when everyone else turned a blind eye because the truth was too painful to handle.

So when the opportunity to leave Earth opened up he took it, seeing it more as a blessing rather than damnation since no one wanted to leave these utopian cities, which were really dying paradises on a dying planet.

But on Mausoleum 2069 he did find a true paradise. The ship was massive with room to roam freely and alone. The aqua- and hydroponics stations were filled with bounties of food to last for years. Political corruption did not extend to mausoleums since such ships were nothing more than an afterthought on the minds of politicians. And often on downtimes, he would go to the Observatory and stare at cosmic formations that floated in magnificent hues of greens and reds and purples-colors that were lively and beautiful-for hours on end.

For John Schott the realist, this was true paradise.

And like Eriq Wyman, he had his duties, following protocol to a T to ensure the safety of the ship's inhabitants.

But on this day an irregularity showed up on the monitor.

It was a blip at first, something small and distant. But as it neared, it increased in size. The shape on the screen was not dimensionally a constant, but something that continuously morphed or reshaped itself into something different; something not quite understood.

When Eriq Wyman entered the comm center, he saw Schott standing behind Jen. They were looking at the monitor's screen, which cast an eerie greenish glow against their faces.

"What've you got?" asked Eriq.

Schott pointed to the screen. "I was upstairs checking the external sensors . . . and this is what we picked up."

The monitor's screen showed curved, grid-patterned lines. The online image pulsated every two seconds before it slowly faded away, and then a cleaner image would reappear with the newer image a different shape in a different mass, until that image finally disappeared and reappeared as something different.

Wyman leaned forward and squinted his eyes inquisitively. "What the hell is it?"

Jen Jacoby shook her head. "If I was to hazard a guess," she said. "I'd say it was a cloud mass, but with that being said, Jim here tells me that the sensors wouldn't pick up cosmic dust because it's not dense enough. Yet there it is."

Wyman turned to Jim Schott, who never took his eyes off the screen. "Could it be that the sensors are malfunctioning?"

Schott shrugged. "Anything's is possible, but we have cloud masses coming through all the time. Why didn't the screen pick them up?"

"Maybe the sensors need to be recalibrated."

"I checked them from top to bottom," Schott returned. "The readouts are perfect. I've checked the radar's frequency, pulse form, the polarization and signal processing, everything. The computer's self-analysis system indicates that the senses are working perfectly."

"Then it's obviously not cosmic dust," said Wyman.

Jen Jacoby tapped a finger several times against the touchscreen. "But it is," she said. "I can pull up an image from the Jupiter-Six satellite." After a few more taps with her finger, another image appeared on screen.

The leading edge of the dust cloud boiled forward like the flow of lava mud, taking new ground. It was surprisingly dense with electrical pops of light going off inside the mass the same way electrical charges go off inside cumulus clouds before the storm. Whereas most cosmic dust is transparent and see-through, this particular mass appeared solid.

"On the surface it looks like cosmic dust. But then again it doesn't," added Jen.