He remembered staring out the window of the giant spacecraft, trying not to think. Stars slowing crawled across the viewport, inching ever onwards in the hollow void surrounding the ship.
Why the hell am I going back?
He was the only passenger, and his sigh echoed in the empty chamber. The massive, hulking craft held but one man. Standard military procedure, he thought. Nothing short of fucking ridiculous. Let’s haul out an Infitum Class star cruiser for one freaking marine. Not that anyone would want to come with him; he was the only person who survived the...incident before. ‘Course, the irony is that what followed was infinitely worse. They thought Phobos was bad...
Phobos. Home sweet home, he thought, and sighed again.
"What now?" The corporal jolted at his voice.
"Er, well, there seems to be another...situation, that’s, um, developing, sir..." He finally got it out. "It’s really not that different from the last time, and we are seeing the same patterns, the same...creatures, you know, the brown things, you...of course you remember..."
"Of course."
Tiny droplets of sweat began to pick their way down the corporal’s forehead; he seemed to be waiting for another question, or an explanation. But there was only silence. "Er, well, we brought you here...we were hoping you might use your first-hand experience to advise us, sir...no combat, of course, just--"
"I know why I am here." The corporal flinched when he broke in. "Simple reconnaissance and advice. Lecture the troops before sending them in. I got it."
The corporal was pale, his underarms wet, his shirt stained. When he spoke, it was a very faint, "Of course, sir, of course..."
UAC Research Colony Beta, hereafter referred to as ‘Site B,’ was began construction soon after the completion and a successful operational commencement of UAC Research Colony Alpha (‘Site A’). A barrage of facts concerning Site B followed; operational capacities, occupant restriction codes, pages of inscrutable numbers and abbreviations. During the tunneling procedure for the construction of the underground testing chambers -- Testing what?, he wondered with a dark scowl -- a series of artifacts were uncovered. These artifacts were of unknown origin, and standard scientific analytical procedures revealed that the artifacts were endowed with unusual properties (see figures 14-35). Another scowl crossed his face as he realized that pages were missing; the description of the artifact properties had been neatly removed.
Further excavations revealed a series of architectural structures, consistent in style and obviously constructed with great skill. Similar abnormal readings were... And it ended; again, apparently "Reconnaissance and advice" didn’t mean security clearance. Instead, typed at the bottom of the blank last page was a simple note that said "Further scientific inquiries were halted when Site A was attacked. First recorded activity (Sgt. H. Conner found eviscerated in Toxin Refinery) at Site B 12 days ago."
Home sweet home, he thought again.