When the Daleks
Came
by
Drew Payne
Chapter
Four – Passing By
Sergeant Dean Holloway pressed his body down close against the drainage ditch’s
bank, as flat and motionless as he was able to be, and almost held his breath.
He was laying there, halfway down the side of the drainage ditch, his body
half-in and half-out of the cold water, and he didn’t dare move. The
water was up to his hips, he had been lying in it for so long that the cold
had seeped right through his pants and was painfully freezing his flesh.
He could feel the cold water numbing his genitals, but he didn’t dare move
– not even to scratch the itch on his nose.
He could hear them, barking out their orders, as they moved along the pathway,
only metres from the top of the ditch. There was no longer the sound
of firing, any resistance must a long since perished or fled, only those
orders barked back and forth. Those Daleks had destroyed everything
and everyone in front of them and now they were only a few metres away from
him. He could feel his heart pounding in his chest, fast and loud,
but he didn’t dare move.
Until five days ago he had been a Sergeant in the Karbala Minor Defence Military,
before the Daleks had overrun them and killed everyone.
He had been in charge of a command of Attack Droids and ordered to defend
the Landing Port outside North Peco, in a classic defensive format.
He had made his Command Post in the Landing Port’s reception building, overlooking
the whole area. He had found two of the Landing Port’s personnel, a
scared man and woman, and two-dozen or so service droids (useless for fighting
even if armed) waiting in there. He had just ignored them and took
up his place on the Observation Deck, to supervise the droids.
They had a long and nerve breaking wait. Dean had found himself pacing
the Observation Deck like some kind of caged animal, back and forth, back
and forth. As he waited his mind went over and over his battle training,
formatting and re-formatting how he would defend and hold the Landing Port.
When the Daleks attacked it was with such speed and ferocity that all his
plans and training didn’t help him one degree.
The moment his proximity alarm sounded he had looked out of the observation
window but the Daleks had already arrived. The Daleks had been moving
so fast that they only registered seconds before they broke through the Landing
Port’s perimeter. The huge Spider-Daleks were already cutting down any Attack
Droids in their path. Behind them came an army of squat Daleks riding
on their round flying disks and firing their energy weapons.
Via his communicator he fired off orders to the Attack Droids to converge
on the Daleks, but to no avail. The Droids only formed more cannon
fodder for the Daleks. The Droids, firing at their full strength, hardly
made a mark upon their armoured shells; they certainly didn’t stop any of
them. The Daleks cut down the through Attack Droids like a scythe through
grass.
In only a few minutes the Daleks had destroyed over three-quarters of his
Attack Droids and were nearly at the Landing Area. The two hoppers,
left out in the open at the North Landing Pad, were already in flames – one
was his hopper. It was then that Dean decided he had to withdraw from
there, as quickly as possible, or else he would be Dalek cannon fodder too.
He did not try to contact his superiors, he knew they would have ordered
him to stay there and ignore the risk he was facing. So he switched
off his communicator as he quickly ran down the two flights of stairs to
the ground floor.
As he reached the foyer he saw the man and woman, their faces twisted up
by fear, standing just inside the main doors. Then his whole world
exploded. With hindsight, he realised one of the Spider-Daleks must have
opened fire upon the building, hitting the doorway, but at the time he was
so shocked he couldn’t think about it.
The force of the explosion threw Dean backwards, smacking his body hard against
the wall, knocking all thoughts out of his mind. He couldn’t have been
stunned there more then a few seconds, though it seem like an eternity, but
when he pulled himself upright he was greeted by a terrible sight.
Where the doors had been was a large and blackened hole, rubble thrown right
across the foyer and thick dust filling the air. The man’s body had been
blown halfway across the foyer floor, he was now lying in an unnaturally
twisted way, while the woman’s body was still just within the doorway but
she was half buried by rubble. Neither of them were moving. Then Dean
heard the metallic angry voices of Daleks outside the building.
He didn’t wait to see what else could happen. Quickly he pushed himself
up onto his feet, trying to ignore the pain in his right-hand side, and ran
for the rear exit.
Outside the air tasted sharp and acid, a thin layer of grey smoke hung around
the building, but he paid it no notice. To his relief, there seemed
to be no Daleks at the rear of the building, none in sight at all.
Without looking back, he ran for the Landing Port’s perimeter, his feet pounding
hard and fast over the neatly trimmed grass, carrying him closer and closer
to the safety of the perimeter.
As he ran, no one fired at him, no Daleks turned their attention to him,
he heard nothing except the distant noises of the Daleks destroying, but
still the pounding adrenaline pushed his body on and on. He ran as if the
devil himself was breathing at the back of his neck.
When he reached the perimeter he quickly cut the links of the fence and slipped
through it. Once on the other side of the fence he carried on running,
fast and fearful. He only stopped running when he was deep within the woods
that press up against the Landing Port, only when his body was hidden by
trees and undergrowth. Stood still, deep in the undergrowth, Dean found
his body was exhausted. Slowly and quietly he sank down onto the ground.
The Daleks had landed, in their giant silver-grey saucer ships, on the Southern
Continent only four days before (their huge battle fleet had swept through
Karbala Major’s moons even faster). When they landed their giant ships
opened and thousands upon thousands of Daleks poured out and spread across
the landscape. Nothing seemed to stop them.
Before the Daleks invaded, Dean’s role had hardly been more than a guard.
He had been responsible for guarding different government facilities.
He had not actually patrolled the facilities, that had been the role of hundreds
of military droids under his charge, but he had been the one responsible
for organising those droids and making sure all areas were guarded.
But Karbala Minor was a dull, peaceful planet, the worst trouble there had
been prior to this was from overexcited tourists. Until that day he
had never been in combat before.
He waited for nightfall, just lying there in the undergrowth of those woods,
for hours before sunset. Then, using his night-vision lenses, he had
carefully picked his way through the dark woods. He had headed away
from North Peco, reasoning that it was probably already overrun with Daleks
now, but that was all the plans he made.
He walked all through the night, leaving the woods far behind and heading
across open farmland. The more he walked the more the pain in his left
side eased. By dawn it had eased down to a dull ache.
At dawn he found himself walking through a two-metre high field of wheat.
Except for the wind and his movement through the wheat, there was no sound
to be heard, certainly no sound of those relentless Daleks. So Dean
carried on walking.
He walked right through the wheat field and two others, through an orchard
and a large rolling meadow. He only stopped, in late afternoon, when
he came upon the still burning remains of a large farmhouse.
He didn’t try to tackle the fire, simply stood at the edge of farmyard and
watched it burn, for a long moment. Watching the flames lick at what
was left the building. He switched on his communicator for the first
time in nearly twenty-four hours and slowly searched through the channels.
All he found was blank static on every channel – no one was broadcasting
at all.
He turned off his communicator and started walking again. He walked
on through the rest of the farm’s land and onto the land of the next farm.
He saw no one on the next farm, just countless numbers of abandoned and lifeless
farming droids.
As he crossed this farm he came upon a huge, deep drainage ditch. On
both sides were wide, gravel paths but no one in sight, the drainage ditch
stretched out to the horizon on either side in a straight line, but there
was no bridge or crossing in sight.
As he stood there, debating whether or not to swim across the drainage ditch,
he saw a flash of light momentarily glint on the white horizon. Quickly
he pulled out his field glasses and turned them onto where the flashing light
had been. It took a moment, a long and nervous moment, while his glasses
adjusted and located the image.
Then, as the image cleared, he almost stumbled backwards, almost turned and
ran. In his field glasses he saw the image of a line of Daleks moving
fast along the path.
In a suddenly rising panic, he pushed his field glasses back into his pants
pocket, turned his back on the distant Daleks and began to march briskly
away. Suddenly the tiredness and fatigue, which had been pulling at
his muscles and mind, was gone. Quickly, his feet crunching down the gravel
of the path, he tried to get away from there.
He had hardly been walking a few minutes when he heard strange and rushing
noises, which suddenly seemed to appear over his head. Without breaking his
fast pace, so he hoped, he glanced upwards. Coming down out of the
sky and heading for an obvious landing in the maze field next to him was
a Dalek saucer. It seemed massive, hovering there above him, the sunlight
almost bouncing off its silver-grey surface, the main body of the craft slowly
rotating. Cold fear pushed all other thoughts from his mind. The Dalek ship
was landing only a few hundred meters away from him.
In only a few moments the whole area around him would be full of Daleks,
none of them wanting to accept him as a prisoner. He now only had one
choice.
He jumped over the edge of the drainage ditch, slipped down the earth bank
and came to rest with the lower half of his body submerged in the cold and
dirty water of the ditch, the rest of body hidden by the tall reeds growing
on the bank. He wanted to shout out in shock as the cold water grabbed
at his legs, but he bit down on it.
He had lain there for hours, not moving as the cold water bit into his flesh
and pain pulled at his muscles from inactivity, but still he did not dare
move. It was still daylight and the Daleks were still very close to
him. He couldn’t see them but he could hear them moving to and fro,
on the path above him. The Daleks seemed to be massing in the field
above him. It was hours before darkness fell, hours before he could try to
quietly slip away, hours before he could escape. He had to wait, he
had to keep quiet and hidden away, ignoring the pain in his body, he had
to survive.
Story © 2005 Drew Payne.
Layout © 2005 Visagraph Films International.