George’s friends huddled down lower to the ground, pressing into the log like they were newborn pups nursing from their mother.
Someone had to look; someone had to know what was coming.
George forced himself to rise up, just enough to see over the snow-covered log.
The thing broke through the tree line just thirty feet from the cabin. A robot, a big-ass robot maybe fifteen feet tall. Two legs . . . the left stepping forward, the right dragging along behind, functioning barely enough to position itself so the machine could take another step with its left. Broken branches jutted out of tears in the metal shell, or plastic, or whatever it was made of. Bipedal—no arms George could see—but cracks everywhere, breaks and tears and dents, smoke-streaks . . . the thing was
Sweet Jesus.
An
The robot paused just past the tree line, big feet hidden in the snow. Something fluttered open near what George could only think of as the machine’s hips. Then, a flash, and a rocket shot out, closing the distance in less than a second.
He was already dropping behind the log when the cabin erupted in a fireless explosion that launched a hailstorm of broken-board shrapnel into the woods, knocking free chunks of clinging snow that had withstood the blowing wind.
George’s ass hit the ground. He stared into the dark woods, mind blank.
A hand on his shoulder: Jaco, leaning in.
“Georgie, was that the fucking cabin that just blew up?”
“Georgie!”
“Yes, goddamit! It was the cabin!”
The sound again,
“Shit!” Jaco said, said it with such ferocity that it contracted his body, made his head snap forward. “Screw that! Everyone, shoot that thing on
“Three,” Jaco said.
Counting? Why was he counting? It was a damn
“Two!”
Holy shit! Jaco was going to fire at that thing out there?
“Jaco, no, you—”
“One!”
Movement all around, George’s friends rising up, the crack of rifles firing followed by the sound of bolts sliding back, then forward again.
George ripped off his gloves, held the rifle tight as he rose to his knees and turned, all one uncoordinated, lurching movement. He swung the barrel of his Remington 700 over the top of the log, knocking aside clumps of snow. The hand cupping the forestock pressed down on the log, snow instantly melting from the heat of his skin.
The big machine turned sharply, swiveling at the hips like the turret of a tank, the motion herky-jerky and halting.
George fired instantly, without aiming, had no idea if he’d hit.
Gunshots from his left and from his right. He popped the rifle’s lever up and pulled it back, heard the faint ring of the ejected shell, shoved the bolt forward but it stuck; his hand slipped off, his momentum lurched him forward into the log.
The guns kept firing.
He slammed the bolt home; the sound of it locking into place seemed to slow time from a mad explosion of a volcano to the slow creep of its lava flow. He looked through his scope at the fifteen-foot-tall machine only twenty feet away, sighted through one of the tears in the shell at the yellowish form.
He pulled the trigger. The Remington jumped. He saw the yellow thing inside twitch, then fall still.
It didn’t move.
Neither did the machine.
“
The rifle reports ended like someone had unplugged a TV in the middle of an action movie. No gunshot echoes, not with the snow-covered trees eating up all sound save for the wind.
George stared. They all stared. No one knew what else to do.
Slowly, like a top-heavy bookshelf with one too many knickknacks, the thing tipped forward: Fifteen feet of alien machine arced down and slammed into the ground with a billowing
The top of it was only five feet away.
They stared at it. It didn’t move. Somewhere under there, hidden by all that bulk, was the alien who had been driving it.
“Holy shit,” Jaco said. “I think we killed it.”