Mac Crack - — Eagle
His radio crackled one last time: “Crack? Report. What did you do?”
Now, at forty-seven, Eagle was a retrieval specialist for a company that didn’t exist, run by a government that would deny his paycheck. His job was simple: find what the ice took, and bring it back.
“I started the next one,” he said, and walked into the storm.
He was no longer a retrieval specialist. He was the seed’s guardian. And the world below the ice was about to remember that some things don’t stay buried forever. End of Part One. Eagle Mac Crack -
The fuselage was cracked open like an egg. Inside, frozen in a rictus of surprise, were four crew members. Eagle didn’t flinch. He stepped over their outstretched hands and found the cargo hold. The box was intact—a cube of reinforced carbon alloy, humming faintly. It was warm to the touch, even here, even in minus forty.
The voice on the radio became frantic. “Crack, you don’t understand. That’s not a weapon. That’s a seed. If you activate it—”
He keyed his radio. “Eagle to Aerie. I have the package.” His radio crackled one last time: “Crack
He wasn’t born with that name. The “Eagle” came from the way he could spot a broken radio wire on a mountain peak from a mile away, his vision as sharp as the bird’s. The “Mac Crack” was a gift from his first drill sergeant, who said his spine was so straight and his will so rigid that he sounded like “a goddamn rifle shot when he walks.”
This time, it was a black box. A stealth cargo plane had gone down three weeks ago near the Yukon border. Official search called it a “mechanical malfunction.” Eagle knew it was a magnetometer spike from a experimental power source—something that should have never been in the air.
The light shot upward, a pillar of blue fire that melted a perfect hole through the glacier’s roof and kept going, through the clouds, through the atmosphere, until it kissed the dark of space. The ice shook. The ground trembled. And Eagle Mac Crack felt, for the first time in his life, a warmth that had nothing to do with survival. His job was simple: find what the ice
Eagle’s hand was already on the latches. “Too late.”
When the light faded, the glacier was still there. The wreckage was gone. And Eagle stood alone on the ice, his face turned toward the sky, a single blue thread of light now pulging softly under the skin of his palm.
