He came to it—the echoes of mocking laughter still reverberating down the empty street. But no, it wasn’t laughter at all—only the relentless staccato of gunfire and a ringing in his ears that wouldn’t fade. Wyatt hauled himself upright and brushed the dust from his uniform. For a brief, disoriented moment, his mind wandered in the haze of shock before reality snapped back, urging him toward the hospital once more. A stray concussion round had fallen nearby—a measured, almost deliberate explosion—and its implications raced through his mind.
‘One of those rounds could be lethal if aimed right,’ he mused, ‘but a nonlethal option might work better in this situation.’ As if punctuating his thoughts, another artillery round landed on some poor souls not far off, its roar merging with the ongoing symphony of chaos.
Wyatt’s instincts screamed for attention. He stopped suddenly, straining his ears. There—a mechanical hum in the distance. He whirled around and saw it: a black speck suspended in the air like an unseen menace. It was far enough away that he couldn’t simply shoot it down, yet close enough that its silent gaze made him feel exposed. For a fleeting moment, a cold fear gripped him. This was no ordinary drone. He suspected it was an explosive variant—the kind of unmanned terror some deranged tacticians deploy to hunt their targets before delivering a fatal blow. His pulse thundered in his ears as he took a cautious step back, his mission momentarily forgotten in the face of impending doom.
After what felt like an eternity, the silence returned. Then, bitter realization flashed through him. That stubby bastard is leading the attack… that is the only reason I’m still alive, he thought bitterly confirming his earlier assumptions. But there was no time for regret—only action. What now? he demanded of himself. He had to lose that drone, that ever-watchful predator.
Wyatt scanned his surroundings with the precision of a seasoned soldier. Nearby, ruined buildings jutted out like broken teeth from the battered street—a labyrinth of collapsed walls and twisted rebar, offering a maze of cover. It was a standoff: the drone, under the control of an unseen adversary who manipulated the battle’s variables, versus Wyatt—one man armed with his wits and a rifle. Tension hung in the air, palpable and suffocating, as the drone edged closer, its approach deliberate and menacing.
Without a moment’s hesitation, Wyatt pivoted and bolted into the maze of rubble. His boots pounded on the fractured pavement as he sprinted into a crumbling building. The structure had probably been once some large company or office building, now it had far more personality. Shattered glass, twisted metal, and layers of dust formed a ghostly tableau in the pale light filtering through broken windows. Shadows danced along the walls, turning every step into a precarious game of cat and mouse.
Wyatt navigated the ruined corridors with exceptional competence—each decision was calculated and instinctive. He darted through narrow passageways, leapt over debris, and slid under fallen beams with the grace of a man who had honed his survival skills over countless battles. Yet, no matter how precise his movements, the ever-present hum of the drone loomed like a sinister metronome, dictating the pace of his flight.
Inside the ruin, time seemed to stretch. Dust motes danced in the shafts of light, the chaos outside faded into a watercolor haze of grays, blues, and fleeting bursts of orange. Like in a dreamscape, in that surreal moment, the ruined walls transformed into an ethereal canvas, and Wyatt felt as though he were suspended between life and oblivion. But the dream was shattered by the increasing intensity of the drone’s presence—a constant reminder that his unseen adversary was always one step ahead.
Through a hallway, down a flight of stairs, the hum pushed him left. Through holes in the walls. The hum changed. It sounded stronger, closer. Down a hole in the floor, towards the level below. He would have been able to escape but the sound, the crunching underfoot gave him away and he forwards ad the mechanical hum surged forward, as if rejoicing zipped forward Even as he navigated the twisting maze of collapsed corridors, Wyatt’s mind raced with thoughts of his relentless foe. Every turn he took, every careful decision, was countered by the subtle, unnerving precision of the enemy controlling that drone. It was as if his every move were anticipated, orchestrated by a master tactician whose presence was felt only through the unyielding buzz overhead.
The drone’s hum grew louder, its mechanical beat a sinister rhythm echoing through the hollowed-out building. In that charged silence, Wyatt’s thoughts twisted into a frenzied analysis. He’s not just following me—he’s outplaying me. Every choice I make, every turn I take, is already anticipated. I’m a pawn in his game. Yet even as the realization struck him, Wyatt’s resolve hardened. He had made too far to just die to an overly smart bomb.
As he sprinted deeper into the labyrinth of rubble, the pace of the chase quickened. His pulse pounded in his ears in time with the relentless drone overhead. Wyatt’s every decision was a calculated risk—each leap, each dodge, meticulously planned in a split second. But the unseen man behind the drone was a ghost, his strategies hidden in the static of war, always one move ahead.
The ruined corridors became a stage for a deadly dance—a race against time where the slightest hesitation could mean capture, or worse. One corridor turned into a flight of stairs, jumping up by fours and even fives. His pulse raging in his ears surging him forward. Turning right, down a more intact corridor. Through a door and through a convenient hole in the wall.
Wyatt’s breath came in ragged gasps as he dashed through a narrow passageway, his mind a whirlwind of calculations and desperate hopes. In the distance, the drone’s eerie hum blended with the distant explosions and the collapsing city, creating a symphony of chaos that underscored the stakes of every decision.
At some point, Wyatt realized that the chase was nothing more than a deadly, one-sided game. He could not run forever he was going to tire sooner rather than later, and his destination—the hospital—remained fixed with time ticking down. That was all that mattered now. Outside, the chaos had melted into a watercolor blur of disjointed hues, and here he was, in a relatively intact hallway within the ruined building. For a moment, it felt as if he’d stepped into an unreal world—a fragile haven amid the carnage.
As he turned to glance back, the drone pivoted, its small, toy-like form with a blinking light now aiming in the opposite direction. That was it: the game was over, or so it seemed. Wyatt clenched his teeth and readied his rifle. It felt almost mocking—the relentless black speck had been pursuing him with unnerving persistence, its unseen operator having a clear shot. Yet, Wyatt’s competence shone through; every decision he made was deliberate, even as the threat loomed large.
Time stretched into infinity as Wyatt assessed his dwindling options. The ruined building itself offered a singular chance for escape. He lowered his rifle slightly, and in that moment, the drone surged forward. Everything slowed to a surreal crawl. Wyatt’s eyes narrowed as he aimed his rifle low—toward the cracked concrete of the floor—and began to fire. Each round struck the surface with a resonant thud, sending splinters skittering up his boots and legs. His face remained an emotionless mask—calm, controlled, yet burning with determination.
You might be reading a stolen copy. Visit Royal Road for the authentic version.
The drone, accelerating as it neared the critical distance for its self-destruct mechanism, was now playing a macabre game orchestrated by an unseen hand. Wyatt, drawing on every ounce of training and instinct, calculated the distance with clinical precision. Then, in a heartbeat, the floor beneath him gave way. He plummeted into darkness, the sensation of freefall mingling with a dawning awareness that his enemy’s plan was unfolding exactly as intended.
In the midst of the fall, an explosion erupted behind him. For a brief, surreal moment, the world transformed into a cascading watercolor of blue and turquoise—an otherworldly display that defied the harsh reality of his situation. The impact of the fall jolted him into consciousness, the acrid stench of sewers and burning debris assaulting his senses.
Wyatt was alive.
Dazed but resolute, he found himself in a narrow corridor—a vestige of the once-grand structure, now overtaken by decay and conflict. He flicked on his flashlight, revealing a path that led deeper into the wreckage of the sewer system. Overhead, debris cascaded down, carrying with it the bitter aroma of charred wood and decay. Wyatt blinked repeatedly, trying to dispel the shock of having flirted so closely with death.
With urgency propelling him forward, Wyatt searched for any exit—a staircase, a ramp, anything that would lead him away from the subterranean maze. Every step was a reminder of the unseen adversary still manipulating the drone overhead, a ghostly puppet master controlling the very rhythm of the chase. Yet even as he was outplayed by an invisible foe, every decision Wyatt made was executed with precision and unwavering resolve.
The ruined corridor stretched before him like a gauntlet. Shadows danced along the walls, and each flicker of his flashlight revealed remnants of a battle that had ravaged this place. Every collapsed wall and twisted beam became both obstacle and potential advantage—a labyrinth that Wyatt intended to master. His mind raced, calculating risks and plotting escape routes, even as the echo of the drone’s persistent hum filled the air.
In that grim moment, as he navigated the treacherous path with unmatched focus, Wyatt understood that his survival depended on turning every ruined fragment into an asset. The chase was far from over, and the unseen enemy was still out there, orchestrating a deadly game. But Wyatt was determined. With the hospital still ahead and countless lives hanging in the balance, he vowed to outthink and outmaneuver every threat—even one as insidious as a remote-controlled drone with a lethal purpose.
Every step forward was a defiant act against fate itself. In this crumbling world, where every decision could mean the difference between life and death, Wyatt pressed onward—resolute, resourceful, and relentlessly determined to reclaim control of his destiny.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
After emerging from the sewers, Wyatt immediately sensed that the battle had changed. The chaos now swirled around him—a cacophony of gunfire, mortars, and the ceaseless roar of engines—echoing down every ruined street. The local insurgents were pressing hard toward the government district, their forces flooding the avenues in a wild, reckless surge. Yet, something was off. The Russians, who had been a steady, menacing presence until now, were no longer in full pursuit.
Sure, a handful of Russian units still moved with the insurgents, pushing toward the city’s heart, but the majority had shifted in another direction. Wyatt listened closely, discerning the subtle differences in the sounds of combat. The clatter of heavier ordnance, the lower rumble of sustained fire—these were not the sounds of an insurgent attack; they were signatures of a deliberate, well-coordinated advance. They were gunning for the hospital.
His grip on the rifle tightened as he melted into the shadows, every muscle tensed and his mind running a silent tally: weapons, ammunition, escape routes. The hospital was so close now—just one street away—but the corridor in between was a battleground in itself.
Up ahead, a thin defensive line had taken shape. A small band of local fighters, their movements calculated and purposeful, held the Russians back just enough to buy time. Wyatt watched them with a mixture of admiration and envy. They didn’t fight with the desperation of the hopeless; they moved like clockwork, as if every action was part of a larger plan. They weren’t stalling for survival—they were buying time. But for what? For him? Or perhaps for something else entirely?
His eyes swept over to the hospital—a massive complex that once symbolized healing, now transformed into a grim refuge for the wounded and trapped. Drones circled overhead like vultures. Wyatt exhaled slowly, his fingers tapping nervously against the butt of his rifle. After his last encounter with a drone, he was determined to avoid another unwanted confrontation with its unseen operator.
What was his play? If he charged headlong toward the hospital, wouldn’t he be an obvious target? A lone figure sprinting toward a fortified building, fully geared and unmistakably armed—he’d be spotted in an instant. His pulse steadied as he weighed his options. In that charged silence, his mind wrestled with self-doubt. Was he making the right call? Was his unparalleled competence enough to outmaneuver forces that seemed to anticipate his every move? He could eave, he could melt into the shadows and just disappear. No, something surged from within him. He had to make it to the hospital
Before he could decide further, a distant, metallic screech shattered the stillness. His stomach dropped as he realized what it meant—artillery. Wyatt’s breath hitched in his throat as the whistling shells began their deadly descent. Then, with a resounding impact, the first shells struck the hospital.
He could almost hear the screams before they began—a chorus of agony that momentarily froze him in place. But then, as quickly as it came, the horror melted into cold, razor-sharp determination. They were shelling the hospital, and that signified two grim facts: one, they weren’t expecting any survivors; two, they weren’t prepared for anyone to charge in.
Wyatt’s fingers clenched around his rifle as he acknowledged the madness of his situation. It was a suicide run masquerading as a tactical opportunity. Yet it was his only chance to reach the target in time. And if the target was already dead inside, then he’d at least fulfilled his part of the contract. A familiar bitterness crept in—a ghost from old battles—but he shoved it aside. Now was not the time for regret.
The first round of shells struck the street, the very ground trembling beneath him. That was his cue. Without hesitation, Wyatt broke into a sprint. Explosions blossomed around him, fire and steel tearing through the air as he ran headlong into the chaos. He weaved between shockwaves, leapt from crater to crater, his lungs burning as smoke and debris clawed at his throat. Shrapnel grazed his skin—a sharp, stinging reminder of how close death could be—but he kept running.
Then, with one final burst of adrenaline, he made it. Collapsing to his knees on the broken pavement, he gasped for air as sweat and blood mixed on his face. In that brief moment, he gave himself three breaths:
One—to acknowledge that he was still alive.
Two—to confirm that he was intact and mission-capable.
Three—to force himself back to his feet.
Rising shakily, Wyatt’s relief was abruptly cut short. He froze as cold steel pressed against him—guns pointed squarely in his direction. His focus snapped to the source of the threat: not Russians, not insurgents, but local police, enforcers, soldiers who had chosen to stand with the civilians.
A tense standoff ensued in the ruined street. Wyatt’s heart pounded as he scanned the faces of the armed men, uncertain if they would understand his situation. He didn’t know if they spoke English, and he certainly didn’t speak their language. In that precarious silence, the only thing that mattered was whether he was friend or foe.
Swallowing hard, Wyatt broke the silence with a tentative question, “English?”
His voice was barely above a whisper, laden with a mixture of hope and desperation. In that moment, as sirens wailed faintly in the distance and the din of battle roared on, Wyatt’s mind churned with self-doubt and resolve. Every step he’d taken had been a calculated risk, every decision a delicate dance with death. And now, standing on the knife-edge between survival and capture, he couldn’t help but wonder if his instincts would be enough to see him through the chaos that lay ahead.