After not touching this book for years, I decided to give it a good with Halo Infinite around the corner. Boy, it did not disappoint! I had this thought that any story not centered around Master Chief or Cortana would be tough to get into, but this collection of stories proved that totally wrong. In fact, I found the two stories with Chief and Cortana to be some of the dullest. This collection of stories took me through a beautiful development of Halo lore and culture from the barbaric brutes to the horrific flood. I loved the journey all-around, with the highlight being the Mona Lisa story of the flood. It kept me on my toes, and read like a brilliant horror movie/story. Also props to Eric Nylund for his unique “Analysis” writing style to tell the story of Admiral Cole. I was thoroughly impressed by the majority of these stories, and would certainly recommend. I’m keeping spoilers and notes below for my own reference:
Halo Evolutions
1 - story about Soren-66. His upbringing as a 6 year old when his mom got sick and died, while his stepfather was too afraid to take her to the hospital because of his illegal crops. Soren attempted to murder his stepfather, but failed and lived in the woods for a few weeks. Eventually, the stepfather got sick and died and Soren buried both his mother and step father. He was given two critical choices by Halsey. One was to join the spartan program, the other was to go through the enhancements. Halsey’s justification was to have a sample within the experiment, but Deja suspected it was to help Halsey clear her own conscious. Soren came out with fingers deformed, and one leg 6” shorter than the other. He got taken out of active duty, made a paper pusher, and attempted to steal a longsword with a rebel which failed. He also fought spartan Randall during the attempt. It crashed and he was listed as MIA, as Halsey thought about her renewed commitment to the betterment of her Spartans. Cool story.
2 - why did brutes lose and end up on planet? What is the backstory? Why the shame? Typos all through story. Pretty wild short story. Very descriptive with the brutes snacking on and hunting humans on this remote planet. An ONI agent fell out of a tree while collecting information on the brutes, and was imprisoned. There was great description of the Parabus clan vs Ceretus and some cool development on their conflict with the former being more natural and the latter more religious towards the great journey. It ends with the Triad religious guy shooting the ONI agent as they were heading to be rescued, because his followers all thought he was already gone for a greater cause. I guess these brutes just were hanging out because the chieftain was a coward and enjoyed defecting. Decent story and certainly paints a more vicious picture of brute culture.
3 - Baird on The Heart of the Midlothian. He had surgery for cancer while the ship was en route to Algolis, to see if there were any civilian survivors after a covenant attack, and to see if the prototype weapon was secure. He wakes to find that the ship jumped into a trap, was boarded, and everyone was killed except him and his smart AI. There’s a scene where he gets stabbed with an energy sword, but survives, and concocts a tricky plan to get the covenant on the bridge to allow him to reconnect the smart AI and self destruct the ship. I think it was done very well, and the story made me feel for the ODST in the short pages it had.
4 - Dirt. Fantastic story of Gage from Harvest, who started out in the Colonial Military before the UNSC. An innie bomb in a bar convinced him and his friend Felicia to signup for the ODST. They had a long career of fighting and running as outer colonies fell. Gage lost his humanity, stopped getting close to people and learning names since they often died. He finally met back up with Felicia after a Spartan rescued them on a planet. Felicia cooked up an op with Gage and Eric to recover gold from a bank to fund their retirement while ODSTs were recovering artifacts from the covenant. There was a fight when they found children and couldn’t decide to take the children or gold. Felicia died protecting Gage while Gage cooked up his own plan to take the artifacts and run to give another pelican time to save the civilians. He had enough running, and wanted to protect this dirt and the future standing on it. He never thought much of the dirt at Harvest, actually wanting to get away from it which he later regretted when the covenant killed his father on the planet. But finally, he had his chance to set off a nuke to kill covenant and greedy ODSTs alike while the rookie ODST could run away and continue fighting the covenant on Earth. It was very cleanly done with a great focus on dirt as the theme of the story. Loved it.
5 - Roland and Jonah, Spartan IIIs from onyx. Beyond that, they were part of the secret beta 5 program, and were Headhunters which were specialized pairs of SIIIs made for incredibly daring missions. Most missions ended in mass destruction, death or both. Jonah was headstrong and took a lot of joy in his role and in killing. Their mission this time around was to blow some covenant digging machinery (looking for artifacts) on a faraway planet, and clear some space for the remaining Spartan IIIs to wreak havoc. Everything was going well as they blew a jackal sniper out of a tree, and killed with efficiency in their active camo armor. Jonah woke up to Roland getting stabbed with an energy sword from a squad of commando elites, with Roland saying “clear” as he died. After some taunting, Jonah let the elites charge him and blew up the primed explosives on the reactors. This was a really cool story of the kinship of Spartan IIIs and the headhunter program, as well as extra detail on their types of missions.
6 - spartan black team. Females 1 and 2, males 3 and 4. They were tasked with eliminating a “Beacon” energy device that was being fed rocks from the surface of the planet, which extracted energy and shot it into space to power covenant ships. Jackals were using drones to dig and recover rocks for the machine. It had 4 legs the Spartans needed to blow. Two met a drone they named Hopalong that appeared to be helpful, and claimed the drones were enslaved and would help the humans defeat the jackals and hunters. After showing them a secret path, Hopalong recovered a cube device dropped from a killed jackal, which he used to release the restraints on all drones. The Spartans has to act quickly to disengage their hunters, set the charges and retreat. Two went back to rescue three after he was dropped from the air and broke his ankle. They loaded on a train and got out of there. Not sure what year this took place, but they had energy shields so I’m curious who black team was. I liked this story as it showed the trickery of the drones who were actually a penal colony (unsociable) and were being put to work by the jackals. The action and teamwork with the Spartans was great.
7 - brilliant story occurring in the aftermath of the destruction of halo. The Red Horse ship was sent to recover survivors and investigate the aftermath of the explosion. They found a pod with a hysterical civilian survivor who later died, saying he came from the Mona Lisa. A squad was sent to that prisoner ship, which was later discovered to be a testing facility for the flood infection on both human and covenant prisoners. Doctor Smith worked for ONI, and was not truthful to Benti and Lopez on the purpose of that ship. He wasn’t just trying to study the virus and find a cure. He was trying to see if they could harness the flood for themselves as a weapon. Obviously it all went wrong, as there was a prison break and elite and human prisoners trying to work together. Lopez and Benti’s mission was then to confirm all navigation data was destroyed. The story was wonderfully tense and exciting, like a horror movie, as the authors brilliantly described the dark terrors and bloody walls and flickering lights. The mystery of the elite stomping the chest of the infected human later to be discovered he was trying to destroy the infection form. The betrayal of Clarence (being an ONI agent, ensure no survivors made it) made it tense at the end. I loved the relationship of Henry the elite with Rimmer and Benti. It was great all the way until the end where Henry was carrying a wounded Benti, Clarence shot Rimmer, and Benti pushed herself and Clarence into the attacking flood to give mama Lopez and Henry a chance to escape. After Maccraw took the last pod, Lopez attempted to shoot Henry but ran out of ammo. The story ends with them in a standoff, Red Horse firing a nuke, and a covenant ship nearby. This story read like a brilliant horror story with squad members slowly getting picked off by a mysterious enemy seeking to takeover and gain their knowledge to keep spreading. From a halo cannon perspective, I am curious how the flood escaped halo in the first place. They claim the covenant prisoners on the Mona Lisa first had it, so perhaps some covenant actually escaped Halo? Regardless, Rebecca was a neat creepy and cold hearted AI that always knew more than she led on, with no intent of bringing back the human recon team. Loved this story and more background on ONI ops!
8 - somewhat bland story of master chief crash landing on earth in halo 2. It picks up with him getting out of the pelican crash from the scarab shot, and meeting up with Commander Palmer (“the” Palmer I’m assuming?) to meet at a rendezvous point with the rest of her squad. This story showed John being stern and serious, as he always is. There was no development of cortana. They recovered two warthogs with John working with these marines, and later met up with the rest of the squad. The LT was a female that John actually remembered from his childhood, and making a promise to marry 2 weeks before Halsey came and took him for training. John, knowing his spartan duty, did not indulge any information about the spartan program that could be viewed negatively and told her not to bring personal items. He was later briefed on the scarab/wraith patrol, and smiled. I didn’t get much out of this story. Maybe that he first met Palmer here and still remembers bits of his childhood? Not much else.
9 - Cortana above high charity with the gravemind. Honestly this story was not very exciting either. It describes more of her struggles with the gravemind who wants to consume all - both organic and sentient life - to be the possessor of all knowledge. He tries to persuade cortana to giving in to him, as he can give her all knowledge as she desires. Cortana resisted with her strongest feeling being towards John and his promise to her, and that since he would never let her down, she can’t let him down. It is fascinating how human Cortana can be, and perhaps that is the biggest takeaway from this story. We already know her connection with John and how at times she seems to be the more human one. The gravemind harvesting all memories of those fallen to the flood is quite interesting. I would love to know more about his past, it makes for an interesting character. His main motivation seems to be total assimilation of all life forms on earth and their knowledge. He tried to relate to cortana in this way. She proved her bond with John was stronger than any desire for knowledge, and is terrified of descending into rampancy. The gravemind assures her of eternal peace and knowledge, and Cortana works the whole story to resist this, slowly losing parts of her memory like Ackerson and absorbing some of the gravemind’s like fallen soldiers. Cortana works to primarily protect the information of the Ark. He also reminds her of how Halsey appeared to hold some data back from her to lengthen her life span. I’m not sure what this data is, but it leaves the door open for another story. It ends with John finding her like he did in Halo 3. Good story, but I’m personally more interested in the history of the gravemind than cortana’s battle with him since we know her connection to humans already.
10 - story of Preston Cole. This fills in the gaps from Contact Harvest and who Vice Admiral Cole was. He was a simple boy raised by farmers. Never extraordinary physically, but had an extraordinary mind. He initially fought insurgents and made his name there, but struggled against one ship called the Belicose. His first marriage faltered due to his extended service, so he married another woman later found out to be an innie. After splitting with her, and later being led to believe her ship was destroyed while being pursued by the UNSC, the Belicose helped Cole on two occasions. Cole later cooked up some calculations to jump within the gravitational pull of a planet, and “supposedly” used this maneuver to escape a battlefield after dropping nukes in the planet and telling his fleet to escape. All covenant ships were destroyed. It is rumored that we is living among innies, UNSC and others far outside UNSC space to be a farmer again, and look up at stars he does not recognize. I thought this was good backstory into who Cole was, why the UNSC needed him, and also some of his personal struggles as he had to fight grueling fight after grueling fight (taking wins but at staggering losses). I am curious if he will show up in Halo canon again. And what of his children?
11 - story of an elite shipmaster returning to the human world of Kholo to find his new purpose. Originally under command of the prophet of conviction, he executed the glassing of the planet and in burning the mark of the covenant on the planet, showing it was cleansed. After the prophet and jiralhanae betrayal, he killed the prophet of conviction aboard his ship, and rallied the elites to his cause (which he was still working on). As he ventured the glassed grounds of Kholo, he saw the destruction he wrought and felt it was due to lies and misguidance by the prophets. Now all Sangheili would need to think for themselves and find their own path, and he intended to begin with his crew. He killed some jackals attacking humans on the planet, and found some pictures with forerunner relics and symbols he could pursue. He proceeded to capture a surviving human, and intended to question him as his followers found new meaning.