Sep. 25th, 2008

acts_of_gord: (apologize to science)
It might have been Gordon's imagination, but he was pretty sure he could hear Barney's final syllables over the inexorable clang of D0G dropping the Combine wall once more. But that was it; when the last echoes died away, the sounds of the world of men were gone. For all that there was no roof between him and the skies, Gordon was as cut off here, on the brink of a precipice deeper than he liked to think about, with nothing else around him except what the Combine had made.

At least, he thought as he picked his way slowly along the stony path in search of a way in, there were no damn floating islands.



There'd been an entrance on the tower's south side, little more than a sally port, and it'd been unguarded. That had struck him as suspicious at the time. Not now, though, not so much. Ultimately it only led to one place: a vast and almost endless corridor, stretching off into the dimly-lit distance on either side, plunging down hundreds of feet, and rising up probably nearly as far. There were no ladders into the precipice, no stairs on any side. No elevators offered a hint of the way to proceed. Not even so much as a seam in the black alien metal of the walls betrayed the possible presence of a door. All that could be seen moving, anywhere, were the pods: scores of them, hundreds of them, the same prisoner transport pods that they'd had Eli in at Nova Prospekt, clanking endlessly by, stopping and opening for a moment, and swaying as they continued along their way suspended from rails too far overhead to reach.

He couldn't remember any more whether this or Nova Prospekt was the scene from the nightmare vision he'd had just before awakening on the train. It didn't matter. The vision hadn't given him any kind of a clue how to proceed- and every moment he stood there staring was a moment neither Eli nor Alyx had to spare. There had to be a way...

The rails split over the mouth of the precipice, he noticed. Pods that were directed to the right passed through a brighter-lit zone that bathed them in a torrent of electrical current. To the left they rumbled onward into the semidarkness unmolested. If he wasn't too badly mistaken, there seemed to be a hint of something lifting in the shadows, as if the pods' rails rose to some other level of the Citadel. That would be a step in the right direction, at least- although not one he wanted to take from inside the pod. If another of those electrical baths was up there somewhere, he needed to be able to free himself quickly. So...

The pod in front of him snapped closed. Before Gordon could question his own sanity any further, he'd leapt up onto it, braced his feet on the tiny bottom lip that prevented prisoners from kicking at their captors, and just barely managed to wrap his arms around the thing. Now all he had to do was hold on.

... and, he discovered a moment later as the pod rattled forward on its journey, not look down for ANY REASON WHATSOEVER.



How long it took before the pod clunked to a stop in the high-ceilinged chamber Gordon couldn't possibly say. The ride had been alternately taken up with fascination, horror, and pure instinctive terror as he stared about him in a quest to do anything but think about how likely he was to accidentally let go and plummet to his doom. There'd been gunships hanging on the walls for maintenance, Striders marching through narrow passageways, units of troops, trains full of prisoners- all kinds of wonders and horrors alike. This was, after all, the heart of the Combine's military power.

The distraction it provided was only for the mind, though. His fingers and wrists were just about to give way. When the pod stopped and he realized there was floor under foot, he let go immediately. Landing on his ass was better than trying to hold on even one second longer-

"Section alert," said an all too familiar female voice. "Unregistered weapons detected. Confiscation field engaged."

The air lit up with a glimmering blue energy, and an intangible force ripped every last one of Gordon's weapons away from harness and hands alike. One by one, they fell to the floor in piles of blackened ash- pulse rifle, SMG, shotgun... even the crowbar.

There were no words. There were absolutely no words. Not even the profane ones would come to mind. Just a dull, solid clunk noise, like the last chunk of metal falling useless to- Wait, no, that was a real sound. Apparently the gravity gun didn't qualify as a weapon. The field had released its hold on the device as soon as its orange internal energies shimmered out of existence, replaced instead with the same blue that filled the air. Well... maybe it still worked? And it was better than nothing? Gordon grabbed it up and examined its tiny instrumentation, but nothing indicated what had just happened. He was going to have to find some way of testing-

The rhythmic thumping of booted feet caught his attention. Overwatch if he was lucky. Elites if he wasn't. Either way, unless he could pull the guns out of their hands, he was screwed; the gravity gun didn't work on organics and the post-human soldiers were still organic enough to qualify. Gordon swallowed and plastered his back against the nearest wall (funny how much easier that was without actual weapons in the way). Closer, now (it wasn't going to work), and closer (it had to work), and closer (it wasn't going to work)-

As the first Combine soldier rounded the corner, Gordon closed his eyes and pulled the gravity gun's secondary trigger. There was a startled squawk- and the sound of booted feet stopped.

When Gordon dared to open one eye, the lifeless form of the Overwatch soldier was dangling in the zero point energy field's grip. And when his finger twitched against the other trigger, the gun flung the corpse straight into two more oncoming Overwatch. Another twitch, and the energy bolts that'd only ever pushed metal and wood and stone around before were lancing out of the gun like blue lightning, striking the rest of the soldiers down...

There was no one left alive in that part of the Citadel to hear Gordon suddenly start cackling. It was probably for the best.
acts_of_gord: (apologize to science)
A flicker of light on the wall in front of him as he waited for his suit to finish charging was all the warning Gordon had; behind him, two telescreens had come to life. He turned, gravity gun in hand, and found himself facing Dr. Breen.

"So, this is Dr. Freeman, at last," Breen said, in a tone that other men reserved for their first sighting of one of their own kidney stones. "I wish I could say this was a pleasant surprise, but it's neither a surprise, nor, as you would surely agree, very pleasant. Well, I am nothing if not pragmatic."

The screens went back. Gordon blinked a few times, and kept moving. Useless as the moment was, it probably indicated he was on the right track.



Damn. Even the Elites' pulse rifles disintegrated under the strange new energy blasts from the gravity gun. Oh, well, not like he wasn't doing just fine without-

"Well, Dr. Freeman," said Breen from the telescreen behind him, "under other circumstances I like to think we might've been able to work together in an atmosphere of mutual trust and respect. Certainly judging from your brief tenure at Black Mesa while I was its Administrator, you showed every promise of becoming a valuable and productive contributor to the scientific process. And yet, I'm not sure what spurred you to it, but there is no place in this enterprise for a rogue physicist."

The chirruping sound of a scannerbot moving into position to blind him could not have come at a better time. Gordon grinned as he snatched the thing out of the air and aimed for the dark-again screen.



Gordon tapped the green button to call the lift; there was no other way out of this part of the Citadel except the wide, flat, open elevator platform. To his disgust, he heard a nearby telescreen switch on.

"Your mentors are partly to blame, of course. My disappointment in Eli Vance and Isaac Kleiner is far greater than my sorrow over your unfortunate choice of career path. In a way I suppose you could not have done otherwise. Who knows what seeds of iconoclasm they planted when you were young and gullible? But while they certainly share a great part of the responsibility for the recent troubles, it is you alone who have chosen to act in such willful disregard for humanity's future!"

Fine words from a man who'd informed his soldiers that they'd better shape up because the alternative, if you can call it that, is total extinction - in union with all the other unworthy branches of the species. Gordon sort of had to wonder whether Breen believed any of what he was saying, or whether absolutely everything that came out of the man's mouth was a lie.

But there were Overwatch coming, and a whir of manhacks in the air. Speculation could wait. Survival now.



Everything hurt. Everything. The Overwatch had been matched in number by the Elites, and no matter how many of them he tore from their balconies as the lift rose past floor after floor there were always more of them. The suit still had enough power left to begin repairing its own structural integrity, but the morphine was gone, and the feel of his own blood slithering between suit and skin from unstanched wounds was something he'd feel in his nightmares if he lived to ever dream again-

"Tell me, Dr. Freeman, if you can," said Dr. Breen from the suddenly-live telescreens in front of him. "You have destroyed so much. What is it, exactly, that you have created?"

( "This is the Freeman. The Combine's reckoning has come." )

"Can you name even one thing?"

( "For once the lesser master lay defeated, we knew the greater must also fall in time." )

"I thought not-"

( "You're not 'the One Free Man'. I understand that. But I believe in you." )

"Hope," he said aloud, and tore the telescreen from the wall.
acts_of_gord: (bad feeling about this)
There was no strength left in his limbs; arms, legs, hands, feet, even the muscles that kept him breathing were trembling, not with exertion but with exhaustion. How much further did he have to go? How much more did he have to do? One Strider lay dead behind him among the heaped corpses of Elites, brought low by the Combine's own energy orbs torn away with the gravity gun. Were there more? What else was coming?

As he stepped around the corner and caught site of yet another precipice and another system of transport pods he almost cried. He couldn't do it again. There was nothing left to hang on with.

One of the pods slithering by was occupied. The wasted, withered figure inside had been a human, once; some sort of metal plate covered where its eyes had been, and metal rods poked from the visible ends of its legs like mockeries of prosthetic science. As Gordon swallowed, its head thrashed violently, and it let out an inarticulate roar.

( "Look, Gordon. Look at what you're throwing away. Is it worth it?" Dr. Breen had said- )

There was no other way. Not for him.

Sorry, Ender, but this time the enemy's gate is up, he caught himself thinking as he clambered into the next transport pod to open in front of him. He'd find a way to make it work somehow, but right now, he couldn't do this any other way.

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Gordon Freeman

December 2012

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