David Hanrahan - Archon of the Covenant

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A solitary machine drives across the sun-drenched soil of the American West. A faint trail of dust lifts into the air as it moves along, scanning the landscape for signs of cognition. It's looking for a survivor to a human plague. It's looking for someone who can still think, someone whose mind was not wiped out by the disease. There are only a handful of places where a survivor might be. This machine, a sentinel, passes through the afflicted, looking for a spark. Looking for a light in the mental darkness at the dusk of mankind. But finding a survivor will only be one part of the journey.

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The soil softened and the dug out burrows filled with shallow puddles. Trash and raw sewage streamed down University. The storm swept past, and the campus quieted. Slowly, the revins emerged from the buildings, looking up at the sky, scanning the horizon for the trails of fulmination and terror. The air was clear and smelled sweetly of creosote and palm fronds. A gust blew off the steep bulwark of the Gittings and Kuiper building and crossed the ripped main lawn. The revins paused, sniffing at the air. A realization was sweeping across their faces. One, then two, then many. Some intruder was amongst them. They shouted and rasped, frantically looking around them. Hysteria. A number came out from right underneath the sentinel, out of the lobby of the Kuiper building. The sky began to break, midday sun casting along the mall, shadows moving with the westerly clouds overhead. The sentinel knew — some scent from its frame was giving it away. Its claret cloak had dissipated in the rain. The organ was reacting to the foreign body.

A tall, sinewy female revin held her hands to her brow, shielding the intermittent sun from her gaze. She stared up at the Kuiper roof where the sentinel sat motionless in the guard tower. She choked on a breath and gasped. She began to motion wildly in its direction, gesticulating some hysterical curse. The other revins looked at her and then up at the roof. The sentinel began to slowly move backwards out of view but it was too late — they had spotted it. In the seconds after, a low rumble carried on the air behind the sentinel, getting louder in the already shrill din of the cries below. They were coming up the exterior ramp. The sentinel panned around the province of fallow minds. The revins ascended the nearby structures — the Eller Theater, the Solar Observatory, the Sonnet Space Sciences Buildings — and surrounded the sentinel on every side of the sky. Across the mall, in the reaches of the stadium summit, the sallow, scarred revin fixated on the rising entropy of the Kuiper rooftop far away. It perched on the concrete stands, one leg off the side, dangling in the ether, eyes widening.

The sentinel paused before the entryway of the corrugated exterior ramp. The revins were on the roof of the library across the mall now. They emerged on the Psychology building to the west. The sentinel heard their cries on the roof of the Solar Observatory just to the north. And they were on the Gittings roof to the east. The sentinel was surrounded. It scanned for escape routes — there was no safe way off the roof without getting through the teeming crowd coming up the ramp. The sentinel was in trouble. It could release a periphery current, decimating one wave, then initiate its final stage defense, and then it would be over. It loaded a flash drive into a hollow rubber casing from its magazine and positioned its turret bearing southwest. It fired the single shot into the sky, the memory chip screaming into heaven. A record in the dirt for someone to find later. It turned back to the exterior ramp. They were there. They had on their face a look of hatred. They were afraid — much like they were with the sound of thunder earlier, but this look was one of rage. They walked carefully out onto the roof and fanned out slowly, nervously looking around, searching for other intruders. But there was just the sentinel. They turned their attention back to DDC39, who had locked its tri-axel in place and fixed its railgun on them from the small inclined level just a short distance in front of them.

A tinny hum carried on the air and the roof exploded in a spray of blood, cartilage, and marrow. The sentinel fired on them in a turbulent cacophony of annihilation. The railgun sang like a thrush whistling in the spring. The first wave was slaughtered, falling in heaps of liquefied fat and sinews. A fourth of the sentinel’s railgun stores were depleted. It shuttled its magazine trays and reloaded. A second wave of revins emerged at the ramp entrance, peering into the daylight and the carnage on the roof. They were infuriated. Any semblance of fear and tension was lost now in the frenzy alighting in their eyes. The sentinel unlocked its tri-axel and moved back towards the western wall, crossing over a narrow ramp spanning a skylight beneath. They rushed out of the ramp bridge, leaping past the corpses and extending their festering extremities towards DDC39.

The skies broke overhead and the sunlight fell fully on the sentinel’s frame. It came to a stop at a small parapet above the skylight. A different cry rang out — a bark. The sentinel panned behind it, towards the ground. The white, half-dome of the Flandrau building glimmered beneath the sentinel’s position. The theater of heaven. The planetarium. The sentinel recalled the aroton and the last thing it flickered back: PLANETARIUM.

The sentinel decided that if it was going to perish, it would do so where its magnalium kin, the unknown herald, had whispered in the dusk. It turned its optics and railgun at the rushing horde. The panel on its center frame clicked open and the banshee disk rattled in the din. A piercing scream shot through the crowd and the revins buckled over in pain, their hands and fingers plugging their ears. Some shot right back up, their faces distorted in pain but committed, nonetheless, to reaching the sentinel. Perhaps some of them had experience with this wail before. As they stumbled, disoriented, on the rooftop, the sentinel lit them up with a rapid left-to-right stream of uranium shells from the railgun — a blurred half-wing angel ripping through their bodies. The sentinel revved its drivetrain and rushed back at them, knocking the still-standing eidolons crashing beneath the ramp and down through the glass skylight, their bloodied, torn bodies shattering through the glass as they sailed the 6 floors down and into the lobby. Crash crash crash. The sentinel spun around on the other side of the roof and gunned it, speeding through the revins who were gathering again near the bridge ramp — another wave appearing.

DDC39 sailed off the roof of the Kuiper Space Sciences building, crashing into the Flandrau Planetarium below like a satellite dropping from the mesosphere. It landed, all axels fanned out cat-like, distributing the impact. The roof, wet and soft from rain collected in its clogged drains, gave way and the sentinel barreled through the upper layer, spinning through insulation, rotten Douglas Fir beams, and soaked sheetrock.

It came to rest on its side inside the upper level seating of the darkened star chamber. The soft glow from the hole ripped open overhead lit the spot where the sentinel landed. Condensation and insulation dropped intermittently from the opening, the shouts of the revins dampened now by the heavily paneled room. The revin righted itself and then heard it again, clearly now — barking. Inside the star chamber, near the massive Vector projector, was a group of sickly dogs covered in mange, barking at where the sentinel stood upright. The room was filled with animals of every kind. Tanagers and sparrows, perched in the ceiling fixtures and acoustics, fluttered into the darkness in a frenzy and darted for the light, disappearing in the chasm from where the sentinel fell. A chuckwalla scurried past the sentinel’s frame and a family of jackrabbits stirred on the adjacent steps, loping off into the darkness. A pair of eyes glowed on the opposite side of the room. And from the southwest side, a series of shouts and bleats croaked in the dark. There were revins on the other side of a large obstruction near the theater entrance. This was some sort of prison. The revins were hurriedly removing the beams and nets that were serving as the chamber door. They’d be rushing in soon.

The sentinel lit its LED spotlight and scanned around the room. A pack of malnourished javelinas caught the sentinel’s glare and scurried in different directions. The light came to rest on the pair of eyes glowing in the dark. It was a lone Mexican Wolf sitting atop a pile of rags and blankets. The wolf stood upright as the sentinel rolled over towards its direction, traversing the narrow walkway connecting the two sides. As it got closer, the wolf snarled at DDC39 and then slowly backed away, its haunch fur standing straight up. The blanket pile moved. There was something burrowed underneath. The sentinel unfurled its mechanical hand and reached down, pulling one layer off the other until finally its light rested on the blinking eyes of a young girl. She looked up at the sentinel’s light, shielding her eyes. A sudden stillness caught the air as the two looked upon each other in the dark of the blank universe of the abandoned planetarium. She, looking into the white light and unable to discern who, or what, was before her. The sentinel, looking down at the motionless girl, unable to tell if she was cognitive. A look of hope crossed her face as she stared into the light and saw the shadow of a hand, the sentinel’s synthetic grip, pass through. Her eyes followed the motion and she finally spoke:

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