He reached for the first hood and pulled it off, revealing one of the alien torturers. The man stared up at him desperately, but the ball someone had stuffed in his mouth prevented him from speaking. Chris removed each of the hoods in turn, revealing the remaining torturers and collaborators. They had all featured in the videos they’d recovered from the alien detention camp. There was no doubt whatsoever about their guilt. Chris had watched the videos himself, just to prepare himself for the task ahead.
Quickly, he pulled his own facemask on and looked up at the cameras. “Start filming,” he ordered. The set of cameras within the chamber came to life, recording the five faces — and Chris, standing behind them. They wouldn’t see his face behind the mask. “Each of you has been found guilty of collaborating with the alien occupiers and of torturing your fellow humans for your masters. The evidence has been placed on the internet, there for all to see. For your crimes, there can only be one penalty. The sentence is death.”
He lifted his Browning and put it to the head of the first torturer. The stench of shit arose as the man fouled himself, suddenly realising that the game was truly up. Chris felt nothing as he pulled the trigger, putting a bullet through the man’s brains. The torturer had deserved far worse than a quick death. He moved to the second torturer, remembering the videos he’d seen that were now firmly burned into his mind. The man had gloried in watching helpless people screaming in pain. He pulled the trigger a second time and watched as the man died, bound and as helpless as his victims.
The remaining three were less guilty, but they’d definitely been involved. Chris shot all three of them and then stepped back to allow the cameras to film their dead bodies. The video would be uploaded to the internet tonight and then the entire world would see what had been done for the aliens — and what had happened to those who had done it. Maybe the next set of collaborators would be less willing to torture their captives…
Shaking his head, he walked away from the chamber, leaving the bodies behind. They’d be buried when night came, left to rot in an unmarked grave. And that, he hoped, would be the end of it. He didn’t want to have to do it again.
Chapter Thirty-Two
North England
United Kingdom, Day 44
The alien had been placed in a large holding cell, with foodstuffs that had been liberated from one of the alien bases by a collaborator who had ties to the resistance. It — no, Gavin reminded himself, he — had been well-treated, with the intelligence crew’s best guess at the kind of environment the aliens would find comfortable. Given the temperature of their buildings, they seemed to prefer a sauna rather than the open air. The alien certainly didn’t look uncomfortable, although there was no way to know for sure. He didn’t seem to speak English properly without his voder, but there was no way they could risk bringing it to their hiding place. The aliens might have been able to track it down.
“I doubt that we will ever be able to talk their language properly,” Linux reported. They were standing together in front of the monitor, watching the alien and two of the intelligence team experimenting with a prototype translator. “Their mouths and ours are just too different. We’d have better luck trying to speak fluent pig.”
“I’ve known a few intelligence operatives who claimed that they spoke fluent donkey,” Gavin said, wryly. “Can we ask him questions?”
“Once the techs have finished, I think so,” Linux said. “We copied their translation programs onto a pair of laptops and started working away at it. I think there will probably be quite a few glitches, but on the whole we have something that should work fairly well.”
Gavin nodded, looking down at the reports from the pair of doctors who had examined the living alien. Most of what they said tied in with the reports from the handful of aliens who had been dissected around the world, but there were some interesting additions. The alien seemed to have undergone some form of surgery at some time, yet it seemed cruder than anything humanity had devised for itself. Their best guess was that the aliens actually seemed to be able to take more punishment than humanity, but any serious injuries healed slower than comparable damage to a human. It didn’t make much sense to Gavin, yet the doctors seemed convinced that it fitted in with what they’d observed about alien behaviour.
Added to the files they’d pulled from the alien computer network, they’d also been able to identify different ranks, at least for alien soldiers. Their military appeared to be strictly top-down, without any of the special arrangements human forces made for their Special Forces, although their intelligence service — which appeared to be completely separate from the military — had no formal rank structure. Gavin suspected that they were missing something, if only because that little datum didn’t seem to fit in with the rest of the alien structure. But their intelligence service might not keep its files on the general system, if only because they would fear hackers from Earth.
The two technicians finished working with the alien and left the chamber, leaving the alien alone in the heat. He seemed to prefer bright light, even at night; the technicians had shown him knobs that he could twist to adjust the light and heat to whatever he considered natural. Some of the researchers had wondered if the alien homeworld was permanently illuminated — they’d come up with all kinds of models to demonstrate how a habitable world could float at the gravitational point between two stars — but Gavin suspected that the alien simply didn’t want to be in darkness. He was alone, miles from any of his own kind — and light years from home. If humans could get uneasy being only a short distance from their own kind, how would an alien feel when the distance to his homeworld was something unimaginable?
He stepped into the chamber, one hand half-covering his eyes against the glare. He’d had to leave his Browning outside the chamber, leaving him feeling oddly naked. The alien’s heaving mass was stronger than him, although he could move quicker if he had to dodge the alien’s grasp. One of the laptops had been left on the bench, proofed against damage caused by the humidity. He picked it up and sat down facing the alien. Dark eyes looked back at him. The alien seemed to be taking his captivity well, all things considered. Humans would probably have been bouncing off the wall by now, demanding release.
There was a note on the screen waiting for him. The alien’s name is Maz’Bak. Gavin read it quickly and then looked up at the alien, Maz’Bak. No one really understood how the alien names went together — if there was a forename and a surname, or if there was some other way they constructed their names — but it was an issue that would hopefully be addressed once the war came to an end. Who knew? Perhaps they could force the aliens to accept something less than total conquest of Earth. And the key to unlocking many mysteries was right in front of him, breathing heavily. Up close, there was a faintly musty smell around the alien. It wasn’t entirely pleasant to the nose.
He tapped the laptop, bringing up the translation program. “My name is Gavin,” he said. The translation program produced a number of grunts, followed by his name. It was clearly smart enough to recognise that there was no direct translation of Gavin. “I am here to ask you some questions.”
The alien made an odd motion with one hand. It seemed almost a shrug.
“Start with the easy question,” Gavin said, dryly. “Why are you here?”
There was a pause, and then the alien grunted back. “I was captured by some of your men and transported away from my people,” the laptop said. Gavin had to smile. “They brought me here and put me into the care of your doctors.”