Leo’s vision swam as he stumbled to his feet. His HUD rebooted, the system taking some time to recalibrate. Static crackled in his earpiece as he tried to contact his team.
“Elena? Arthur? Anyone?” he called out, his voice echoing in the vast, unfamiliar space.
“I’m here,” came Elena’s calm voice, from behind him. She crouched nearby, her sniper rifle already drawn and scanning the area. Her helmet's visor glinted faintly under the dim, ambient light. “Looks like it’s just the two of us, Leo.”
They exchanged a brief nod before taking in their surroundings. The corridors stretched endlessly, their walls inscribed with shifting symbols similar to those in the ruins.
Leo took point, his assault plasma rifle raised as they moved cautiously down the corridor. Elena trailed a few meters behind, her sniper rifle trained on their flanks, eyes scanning for any threats.
“This place… it’s massive,” Leo murmured, his voice filled with awe. They passed towering archways and structures that seemed to defy gravity, with parts of the architecture floating in midair, connected by thin streams of light. “How do you think it works?”
Elena’s voice crackled over the comm. “If I had to guess, some kind of advanced gravitational manipulation. It’s beautiful but keep your focus.”
As they ventured deeper, the silence was interrupted by faint footsteps that were growing louder by the second.
“Contact,” Elena whispered, her voice sharp. She took a position behind a nearby pillar with her rifle aimed down the corridor. Leo shifted into a defensive stance, his weapon raised.
From the shadows emerged two towering figures clad in the familiar crystalline biomechanical armor of the Chimerians. Their glowing eyes locked onto Leo and Elena, and one of them let out a guttural growl.
“Elites,” Leo muttered as his grip tightened on his rifle. “Great.”
The first Chimerian spoke, his voice a distorted mix of guttural clicks and snarls, translated through their suits. “Humans. This will be over quickly.”
Leo smirked, masking the tension tightening in his chest. “You’re welcome to try.”
The first Chimerian charged, claws raised high. Leo and Elena started firing, as the Chimerians got closer, Leo darted forward, activating his plasma sword as he met the attack head-on. The blade clashed against the Chimerian’s crystalline arm, sending out a shower of sparks.
The strength behind the blow sent Leo sliding back a few feet, but he recovered quickly, pivoting to slash at the Chimerian’s exposed side. The strike left a glowing scar across the armor but failed to penetrate fully.
“Elena, any time now!” Leo shouted, narrowly dodging a swipe aimed at his neck.
“Hold still,” Elena shot back, her voice cool and steady. She exhaled, aligning her sights on the Chimerian. A sharp crack echoed as her sniper round slammed into the creature’s shoulder, the armor cracked making the Chimerian stagger.
Leo seized the opportunity, activating the thrusters in his boots to close the distance in an instant. He drove the sword upward, aiming for the weak point at the Chimerian’s neck. The creature twisted at the last second, the blade skimming across its armor instead of delivering a killing blow. The Chimerian retaliated with a backhanded strike that sent Leo tumbling into a wall.
“Leo!” Elena called out while repositioning to higher ground. She fired another shot, this one striking the second Chimerian’s knee and slowing its charge toward her.
Leo rose, shaking off the impact. “I’m fine,” he grunted while he picked up the plasma sword. The first Chimerian lunged again, and this time Leo met it with a precise downward slash, cleaving through its left arm joint. Sparks flew as the limb fell to the floor, but the Chimerian didn’t falter. It roared and swung its remaining arm in a wild arc.
Elena took advantage of the opening, firing a Electromagnetic sniper round that pierced the Chimerian’s exposed neck. The creature collapsed, its body convulsing as it crumbled to the ground.
The second Chimerian roared seeing its companion dead, leaped toward Leo with claws bared. Leo rolled under the attack, slashing upward with his plasma sword as he passed. The blade clashed with its armor creating sparks and causing it to crack a bit. The creature turned, preparing another charge, but Elena’s sniper round prevented it from doing so.
As Elena and Leo were fighting their battle, somewhere else.
…
Lt. Nakamura and Samir emerged in a vast chamber filled with floating platforms and glowing runes. The floor beneath them seemed to shift and pulse as they moved, each step creating faint ripples of light.
“Stay close,” Nakamura ordered, his tone sharp. His dual plasma swords hummed to life, the twin blades casting an eerie green glow in the dim chamber.
Samir followed, his gun held at the ready. “This place feels... Where are we?”
Nakamura didn’t reply, his sharp eyes scanning for threats. His instincts paid off as a faint growl echoed from the shadows. Three Chimerians emerged, their crystalline armor glinting as they approached with predatory grace.
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“They’ve found us,” Samir muttered, raising his weapon.
“Stay calm. Follow my lead,” Nakamura instructed. He stepped forward, his plasma swords raised in a defensive stance.
The first Chimerian charged, claws extended. Nakamura sidestepped the attack with fluid precision, his left blade slicing across the creature’s arm while his right slashed at its torso. The twin strikes left glowing scars, but the Chimerian retaliated with a spinning kick that Nakamura avoided expertly.
Samir fired his gun at the second Chimerian, the blast staggering it but failing to penetrate its armor. “These guys are really tough!”
“Focus on their joints!” Nakamura barked, parrying another strike from the first Chimerian. His blades moved like extensions of his body, weaving an intricate pattern of light as he danced around his opponent.
The third Chimerian lunged at Samir, but he ducked under its claws and fired a shot at its exposed knee. The creature stumbled, and Samir quickly followed up with a close-range blast to its faceplate, cracking the armor.
Nakamura finished his duel with the first Chimerian by feinting left and then driving both plasma swords into the cracks of its chest armor. The creature roared before collapsing, its body sparking and convulsing.
“Two left!” Nakamura called out, turning to face the others.
Samir fired another round, this time shattering the second Chimerian’s knee joint. Nakamura rushed in, his blades flashing as he severed the creature’s head in a single, clean strike.
The final Chimerian lunged at Samir, but Nakamura activated his thrusters, launching himself into the air. He descended with both blades pointed downward, driving them through the creature’s back. The Chimerian let out one last guttural cry before falling silent.
Samir exhaled, lowering his weapon. “Remind me never to get on your bad side, Lieutenant.”
Nakamura, his expression always serious, didn’t say anything at first as he retracted his blades. “Just follow orders, and you’ll be fine.”
He activated his comms, but only static greeted him. “This is Lt. Nakamura. If anyone can hear me, respond.”
No answer. He exchanged a look with Samir, his expression unreadable. “We keep moving. The others are out there somewhere. And we’re going to find them.”
…
Commander Vorsk moved with the deliberate grace of a predator, his towering frame casting a long shadow in the dimly lit corridors of the alien structure. Flanking him were two Chimerian elites.
Vorsk paused to study a cluster of glowing runes etched into the wall, tracing a clawed finger over the symbols, and they pulsed faintly at his touch. “This structure holds some ancient secrets. The humans will not leave here alive.”
His musing was interrupted by the faint, distant echoes of a fight. Vorsk’s ears twitched, his posture straightening as he turned toward the sound. His elites stiffened, their claws flexing instinctively.
“Humans,” one of them hissed, their voice dripping with disdain.
Vorsk raised a hand, silencing them. His glowing yellow eyes narrowed, the faint light within them intensifying. He began to move toward the source of the commotion, his stride confident and unhurried. The elites exchanged glances but said nothing, falling into step behind their commander.
As they advanced, the sounds of battle grew louder. Plasma blades hummed and clashed, and the distinctive sound of human firearms echoed through the corridors. Vorsk tilted his head slightly, as if savoring the distant cacophony.
They reached a high vantage point overlooking a chamber where the fight was taking place. From the shadows, Vorsk and his elites watched as the humans battled a pair of Chimerian elites.
One human, a male wielding a plasma sword, moved with surprising agility, matching his opponent blow for blow. Another, positioned at a distance, provided cover fire with a sniper rifle, her precision strikes forcing the Chimerians to divide their attention.
He turned away, his expression unreadable. “Come. There are more of them scattered throughout this place. Let us see how long they can survive.”
The elites hesitated, glancing back at the chamber where the two humans now regrouped. One of them growled softly. “Commander…You do not wish to engage?”
Vorsk’s lips curled into that faint snarl once more. “Patience. Let them tire themselves. When the time is right, we will strike.”
The thing is he wants to see their reaction when he will present Arthur’s head to them, and he wants them to bring his head back to the humans. That is why he left them for now.
Without another word, he strode off into the shadows, the other two following close behind. The echoes of the humans’ victory faded as the Chimerian commander vanished into the depths of the alien structure, biding his time for the perfect moment to unleash his wrath.
…
Arthur stepped out of the hall he had been transported to. He took a deep breath, steadying himself as his eyes scanned the vast, alien corridor before him.
It wasn’t the emptiness of the space that unnerved him, it was the feeling of something alive within the walls.
Then he felt it. A subtle pull, like a thread tugging at the edge of his consciousness. It wasn’t physical, nor was it entirely mental, but it was there, undeniable and insistent. It came from deep within the structure, its direction clear in his mind. Arthur instinctively placed a hand on the hilt of his sword.
He activated his technopathy, sending out a ripple of his awareness into the surrounding environment. His ability brushed against the machinery embedded within the walls, ancient and far beyond human understanding. But the response he got from them was silence.
It wasn’t that the technology was damaged or broken; it was as though it was deliberately shielding itself from his influence, locking him out. His technopathy met an impenetrable barrier, and for the first time in months, Arthur felt a flicker of unease. Whatever intelligence had designed this place, it was leagues ahead of humanity, and it’s like it had anticipated intruders like him.
He exhaled sharply and tried again, this time extending his senses outward in a wider range. Almost immediately, his mind latched onto familiar presences. Elena and Leo. They were nearby, the unique energy patterns of their armor unmistakable against the backdrop of Chimerian signatures.
“Good,” Arthur murmured under his breath. He concentrated, his ‘Map’ highlighting their locations on an overlay of the structure’s map. The two were moving, but their path was clear of Chimerians for now. He could sense the faint energy spikes of a recent skirmish, a fight they had evidently survived. Relief washed over him briefly. They were safe. But he couldn’t find Samir and Lt. Nakamura within five kilometers around him.
He frowned as he also registered several Chimerian signatures clustered in the opposite direction. “They’re moving too,” he noted, his voice low. But the Chimerians were moving opposite to his team.
Arthur turned his attention back to the subtle pull in his mind, the quiet call that seemed to grow stronger with each passing moment. He didn’t know what it was or why it was reaching out to him, but he knew instinctively that it wasn’t something he could ignore.
Glancing at the map overlay of Elena and Leo’s positions one last time. Satisfied they were out of immediate danger and seeing their vital signs intact from their armors, he began moving toward the source of the call.
***