Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Rebellion Ekibyō no tengoku: Blackwing Virus | Rebellion of Atrisia

  • Thread starter Emperor Immortuos
  • Start date
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EQUIPMENT: Armor, Primary Weapon, Secondary Weapon
OBJECTIVE: Safeguard VIP Prennis Keeoli Prennis Keeoli
LOCATION: The Palace
TAGS: Luna Terrik Luna Terrik | Prennis Keeoli Prennis Keeoli | Kyyrk Kyyrk
Getting to Callat was easy. Holding the line was the hard part. Tsian and her men fought with everything they had. And, against all odds, the horde was beginning to clear. But it wouldn't be enough. Many had already fallen. And now, it was just Tsian. She could feel the infection burning in her veins. Her time was upon her. And so she fought. With every possible fiber of her being. Keeoli needed time. Tsian would buy it with her life. And she was willing to do so.

Tsian had fallen. But she could still function. She pulled her sidearm from her thigh holster, firing shot after shot into the remaining horde. It held the line. Tsian was too weak to call out to Keeoli, even though she desperately wanted to scream at her to hurry up. But soon a stillness descended on the area surrounding them. Tsian allowed herself to go limp where she lay. It was done. Or so she thought. With horror, Tsian watched as one of the Nephilim, now taken by the virus, stood. A large metal fragment gripped in its claw. It turned, and began to charge the nearest uninfected person. Keeoli. Tsian tried to call out, but she couldn't. Her arm was too weak to lift the pistol. So she could only watch in horror as the creature charged the unsuspecting doctor. But as the light faded from Tsian's eyes, she saw one final glimpse. Rescue had come. A dark being landed between Keeoli and the charging juggernaut. What happened now, frankly, was none of Tsian's concern. Her head lolled to the side, and she breathed her last. Just another casualty in the tides of war...
 

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EQUIPMENT: In Signature
LOCATION: Xam'Chi Streets
TAGS: Luna Terrik Luna Terrik | Tsian Denira Tsian Denira | Prennis Keeoli Prennis Keeoli
Voph landed with a thud, directly in the path of the beast. Lightsaber already alight, the violet blade spun to behead the creature, ceasing its advance. He breathed a heavy sigh of relief. Prenn was safe. Another deep breath. He'd made it. A cure could be made. They'd won. Voph breathed another heavy sigh, turning to look at the woman crouched behind him over the figure of Damsy Callat. His lightsaber hung idle at his side, as if all the strength had left his body. That was when the pain started creeping up his spine.​
Voph looked down at the chunk of metal protruding from his gut, and the blood oozing forth around it. He'd done it. Prenn was safe. The weight of a galaxy crashed down upon his shoulders, and Voph collapsed to his knees. He coughed, spitting blood onto the stones beneath him. His lightsaber fell from his hands, the blade going silent as the lifeless hilt struck the ground. Another deep, shuddering breath was taken. Voph could feel the world swimming around him. He had to get to her. She had to know.​
A bloodstained hand gripped Prennis's arm. Voph pulled her back, and placed his other hand upon her head. The force surged through him, filling the woman with what had been taken from her. He had no choice. He had done it to protect her. But now she needed it to protect him. The effort drained him so that he fell back, pushing the metal fragment back from where it exited behind him. Voph reached out towards Prennis, seeking one final moment of comfort. His words were choked, but they had to be said. It was the only chance.​
"Find...Vytal. There...is....a second....Ch--cha..."
Voph shuddered under the effort, and coughed again. Voph's head slowly fell back, and rested against the ground. He wasn't afraid. He hadn't been before. He wasn't now. Death was his friend. His ally. But if he was right...It would be little more than a temporary measure. Voph's breathing slowed, and with the final ounce of effort, he turned his head towards Prenn, and smiled weakly. Had he sacrificed himself for nothing? Perhaps. But he'd saved Prenn. If by his death, one person may live, then it was a worthy sacrifice indeed.
Voph just wished he could have saved more.
Perhaps he could, if Vytal could find the way.
But none of that was his concern now.
As the darkness enveloped him, Voph found himself dreaming of Vylmira.
And how he should have liked to see it one more time.
But soon, the silence overtook him. Darkness surrounded him. And with a final breath...
...Voph died.

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The dead were still waiting outside the small shrine, banging on the iron doors and shutters, eager to tear apart the pregnant woman and Maple , who could not really fight due to a broken leg, and only barely able to shoot straight through the pain with one arm. The Pregnant woman was near catatonic with fear. Maple knew there was no fighting their way out normal, not with the sheer number of undead surrounding the shrine. The doors and shutters would hold. For now. Maybe about fifteen minutes. She felt them cover the roof.

Maple was terrified. She really didn't have some inspired method of escape. It was just her, a head swimming with pain, and a sniper rifle that was useless at close range.

Maple could hear the pounding on the doors and shutters grow more aggressive. They might not have fifteen minutes. She turned frightened eyes to the Dragon Fountain still spewing unholy blood, looking metal as feth.

Maple considered what she knew about weather affecting spells of the Mandragora. She also considered what she knew of Blood Magic. It was deadly if she fethed it up.

Maple forced herself to go past her pain to focus her madness to make the chaotic energies work.

"Mother Nature, the Arcane knits my flesh." She spoke, the words of the healing spell crystal clear.

Slowly and painfully, she felt the magic start to reverse the damage. But it would not reverse it before the undead were through.

She crawled on her good arm and leg to the fountain, dipping her fingers in the blood of the fountain to start tracing the runes she would need.

The magic of Vytal Noctura Vytal Noctura spread throughout the world, the Force of which utterly broke Maple's concentration for a second but she soon rebounded, watching with shock and fascination as magical Leylines appeared through cracks in the earth, many tiny one going directly through the shrine fountain.

Maple stared. They had built the shrine right over magical faults. Oh, this was gonna suck.

"Hey, you!" She called out to the pregnant woman, who turned hesitantly to face her.

"What I'm about to try is extremely stupid, and will likely get us all killed. But we have no other way out. The doors won't hold, and those things will eat us alive. Better to die badass than zombie food."

The terrified woman only nodded. Getting under a nearby table and covering her head.

Maple continued to scrawl the runes right over the lines, even as she heard the hinges on the shutters weaken. Minutes left. It was all or nothing. But she had never tried to formulate her own and was in unknown territory.

Maple began to focus, hearing a hinge break off the door as the woman's screaming intensified.

Her arm had almost healed its minor break. She aimed her rifle up, rolling over to face the celing as a second hinge from somewhere gave.

Maple screamed to help her brace for it as she charged the Force through her rifle and fired.

What should have been armor piercing became a det round as it blasted a large hole into the ceiling.

Maple screamed as she felt her arm break once more from the recoil, discarding the rifle as she drew from the awakened Leylines, super-charging herself with power. There were clouds above. She heard the mutilated dead scrambling to climb the building to get in and she knew she had seconds.

"Mother Nature..." Maple got out, drawing from the magic of the corrupted fountain. She saw a necrotized hand reach into the rim of the blasted open ceiling.

"The wrath of the Sky shall destroy my foes through an offer of dark blood."

The clouds thundered, turning black with rumblings of golden light within.

Maple screamed in pain as golden lightning arced off her body, causing her to writhe in agony.

The clouds began to rain down golden spikes of electricity on her location, slamming into undead surrounding the shrine and fires to erupt all around, burning the undead. The shrine caught fire too as Maple continued screaming from the terrible magic she had called down. Only her madness, which had imagined and made her experience a thousand, a trillion worse agonies, allowed her to withstand it.

The lightning spikes continued to rain down brutally on the ritual area, destroying undead, and netting a screaming Maple dozens of XP.

(Taps X repeatedly)

The zombies burst from lightning, igniting everywhere.

The spell ceased and Maple stopped thrashing. The pregnant woman came out from the table.

"You alright?" The woman called out hesitantly to Maple, the inner shrine heating up.

Maple coughed violently. Now she really did have nothing left.

Raindrops hit her suit as it started to pour from the clouds, starting to put out the inferno.

(Plasmid Acquisition Theme Plays)

(New Spells Learned!)

Spell: SPELL OF LIGHTNING

Conjure multiple lightning spears for physical aiming and throwing. As skill grows, number of spears thrown increases

Spell: SPELL OF LIGHTNING (BLOOD)

Through a sacrifice of blood, call down multiple, severe lightning spears at the cost of temporary immobility from intense pain at channeling the magic

Thirty minutes later...

The ritual site was a ruin when they exited the shrine, Maple at last able to walk on her own two feet, though the woman still helped from time to time when her energy left her. The soul of spheres was still there in the middle.

Maple directed her to one of the shrine buildings, stumbling as they walked through completely incinerated dead, now nothing but ash.

From the dead pile of Assassins she had butchered earlier, she retrieved the remaining pieces of her cane. The shotos still worked. She clipped them to her bag. She was not leaving the remains of her past to rot here. They were precious little shards of sanity to her. The crystals had been a gift from Ursula. She still had one of the Assassin's canes from earlier. Nice little mementos.

The Pregnant Woman still looked frightened. She knew they were more of them, somewhere, and Maple's rifle only had so many shots.

Maple turned to her. "Lets get the hell out of here." (On the edge of forever: 90 XP)

The woman nodded in agreement and they slowly began making there way out of the infected zone, Maple shakily aiming with her rifle as she took point. The zombies wanted the woman, they would have to go through her. One way or another they were leaving this place...

(Exit Post for Maple)
 
Theme: One last push soldier, it's time to go home.​

Sergei was going to wait for proper introductions when a message flashed across his helmet.

WARNING, NEARBY CIVILIANS IN DANGER, WARNING

He cursed as he turned and bolted up the street, following the path on his HUD provided by the ship, he counted the meters as he ran, getting closer. Almost there, and it seemed this civilian was right on top of where his other target was. Bloody hell this would complicate things. He kept running as the timer on his oxygen kept running down, pushing himself harder requiring more air supply from his quite demanding lungs. But at this point he didn't care. Time was of the essence.

As he created over some rubble, he saw massive cracks in the ground, and two more of those lightsaber wielding yahoos in a fight for their life against one that appeared to be infected. And his initial target was just before him in the ship that appeared to have been torn open, and then resealed. No time to think, Sergei immediately called up to the ship.

"Combat extraction deploy ropes at 100 feet, prepare winches to extract civilians!"

"Combat extraction confirmed," the ship calmly replied, doing a dive followed by an unnaturally hard pull back to come to a complete stop. Hovering between Sergei and the crashed ship, the rear ramp opened, and ropes deployed from two different winches with harnesses on them.

Sergei looked down at the female before him, the one who was the Exarch's sister Eira Talon and immediately made the choice that regardless of her injuries, it was imperative to extract her now. He was as gentle as he could be, but picking someone up and throwing them over your shoulder never really was, and he fireman carried her to the winches. He immediately began hooking her in when he got to the winches and let the ship hoist her up, knowing full well it would bring her inside safely, he'd just have to unhook her. That done he ran over to the crashed ship, rifle at the ready for any nasties that might be waiting. He called over the comms to John Locke John Locke to signal he was almost done.

"This is Commander Sergei, on site and extracting civilians and targets,"

He wasn't disappointed as he found three scratching and clawing at the surface attempting to get inside, and he wasted no time in ending their miserable existence with three well placed double taps. By now he was sucking air as he was running out of time left on his own air tanks. Twenty minutes and counting. He couldn't stop to think about it though as he pulled out the plasma cutter and began cutting his way through the hull, his mind singularly focused on his objectives.

In a few minutes he was through, with a gap large enough for him to get through, and with a Herculean front kick, he kicked the wall piece down and out of the way, much to the terror of those inside. He didn't mince words with the nobles inside.

"I'm Sergei Jachovich of The Dire Wolves, come with me if you want to live,"

He then immediately turned around and headed back to the cable with the harnesses. He hooked himself and showed the other nobles how to do the same by hooking their first up in quick, but calm fashion. And up they went. The winch motor wasted no time in pulling them up with a hard yank, followed by an extremely quick reeling in until they were level with the ramp, and the cable shifted over to allow safe dismount. Sergei immediately unhooked himself and dragged the other two so the noble could unhook himself and Sergei immediately focused on his less conscious friend. Once she was safely unhooked the cables went back down and Sergei took her to the med bay, getting her on the cot and then leaving to seal the door behind him. Sergei walked to the edge of the ramp and saw the remaining nobles had strapped themselves in, and were on the way up, but that left the two, Darth Empyrean Darth Empyrean and Srina Talon Srina Talon , in the open fighting to extract. Sergei was quick and decisive with his solution. He hooked himself into the harness and readied his rifle as he called to the ship.

"Ship get us closer to the targets, provide covering fire we need to extract them!"

The ship did exactly as ordered, shifting forward as it opened fire with it's laser cannons at those it deemed opponents thereby providing an avenue for escape for the Exarchs in question. Sergei turned on his helmet mounted speaker to call to them.

"Come on! We got the civilians let's get the frak out of here!"

He began firing his rifle as well to provide cover, and while it would be a slightly dangerous jump for someone not granted superhuman abilities with the force, it was a paltry leap for anyone of the Exarchs' capabilities. Sergei's weapon was going full auto as he gave everything he had left to cover them. It was all or nothing now. The end was in sight. Just one last push and they could go home. Sergei had lost so much for this objective, but was almost there.

Gerwald Lechner Gerwald Lechner
 
Location: Atrisia
Tagging: Caedyn Arenais

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“Umm,”

The market? Asaraa’s eyes flicked over the city scene in front of them, observing the city without actually seeing it. She had walked through the market earlier in the day, she could remember one of the stalls had this really cute little necklace she’d considered buying when she’d walked through on her way to the landing pad to meet Caedyn in the first place.

She’d left the market and the spaceport and turned down towards a big clock tower with spires on it…something that looked a little bit like…that one over there. A hesitant hand come up, pointing down the street, a street not quite overrun with infested but certainly not empty of them. Not by a long shot, the young Jedi could see them gathering, ambling down the cobblestones that once used to be a thriving hub of activity. She only had to close her eyes to see those ghosts, the men and women who had once inhabited the street when she’d passed through it the first time. Laughing, smiling, wrapped up in their own lives…oh the difference an hour made.

“Times like this make you wish we could really do anything we wanted to with the force huh? What I wouldn’t give to be able to actually walk on the air right now.”

To be able to turn back time, to tell all those happy smiling faces what was coming, to get them away to safety.

“Straight through them?”
 
☤ Golden Heart, Cold Hands ☤
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{ Location: Kan Lwai Fong, Xam'Chi }
{ Equipment: Robes + scrubs, meditation amulet, holo matrix,
diagnostic gauntlet / headset, medkit, blaster pistol }
{ Status: Hoping she's not infected }
{ Objective: SOF - Save Our Fish Save Atrisia }
{ Tag: Luna Terrik Luna Terrik John Locke John Locke }
{ Post: 06 ~fin~ }​
~ ~
Before she could stand to leave, he saved her. She was torn back from her work, loosing grip on the blood-drawing prick, but Berrezz quickly moved to stabilize it and Damsy in her hands' stead.

The heel of Voph's palm brought the illusion of heat and light. A blinding embrace that was neither. A daydream played in fast forward behind her eyes, one she felt she had before without remembering exactly when. Confusion came first, momentary overwhelming, but then her breathed in fresh air as an iteration of her that had not seen the world for weeks.

Her losses had never been presented more clearly to her. She recalled it all at once. Faces committed to her memory that had faded into others' became again his.

When the physical contact fell away, Prenn turned herself around and clambered over the cobblestone to him. "I got you. It'll be alright." Her hands flew to this abdomen, tangling in his robes as she tried to get to the bare wound. Her wild eyes found his blindfold as the first of his last words stumbled forth. She was attentive to them, but at the same time spoke over him, "No, Voph, please, h-hold on... Don't—" —leave me, she didn't get to finish as Voph drifted away before her.

Her head hit his shoulder, robes catching tears, but she didn't have more than a moment to mourn before Berrezz exclaimed, "We got it, doc!" and she pulled herself away to return to the commandos. After convincing him to leave his captain, they began their sprint back into the Red Light District. Prenn took her suitcase back to allow Berrezz the ability to shoot. As she dodged undead, the nurse spotted Tsian, fallen. And, one by one, recognized Nephilim armor either likewise lying in the street, some suicide victims, or assimilated into the horde.

The nurse made for a ransacked brothel a few yards from Nanban's road's end and jumped through the broken display window. Berrezz followed, joining her behind the reception counter, and fortunately not by carriers. Immediately she set up her analyzing and synthesis equipment. "I hate to ask after what just happened..." began Prenn, pausing to trade Damsy's blood sample with a beta-blocking stim shot, first wiping away the smear on her arm with iodine tincture and then injecting herself. Relief flooded her veins, the tremors in her hands dying away. "...so I won't. Get back to the quarantine z—"

Smooth were his interjections: first the reloading and cocking of her carbine, and finally words. "Regardless an' with respect, no. Weird time to be getting cold feet." Prennis shook her head. Of course. "You an' me 'g'inst the world, doc." With that, he stood to take up guard at the door. Where he settled still in the threshold's shadows, he could spot trouble without it first spotting him.

Into the DNA synthesizer attachment in her gauntlet went Damsy's blood. The reading was not instantaneous, but here they had time to wait. When it chimed, Prennis asked Berrezz a question the display had already answered, "Damsy's sithspawn?"

"Mmhm. Shifter an' hydrid, too," he replied from her position. "That a problem?" He hoped not.

"Contrary," she mused, retrieving the altered sample - now completely clear with participated thin, silky thread of DNA - and emptied in into a titration flask she had meanwhile prepared with a bacterial mixture. "We are extremely lucky she is." She carefully swirled the contents around before setting down the glassware. It had to sit for the plasmids to replicate. "I'm unsure if it's her alchemized biology or her Shi'ido genetics, but I'm willing to put credits on one or both being the reason she's immune."

A dry laugh came her way from the officer. "Maybe we didn't see the same thing out there, and I'm glad she's holdin' out, but she's not in a good way."

He was right again. After transferring the liquid into a chromatography tube, she woke up her tablet with a series of taps and navigated to the logged DNA sequence. A few seconds of manual observation confirmed it and she spoke, "There's no indication she should be reacting like that." Whatever was happening to Damsy out along the canal, the Virus was not causing it. "Certainly, she experienced some initial discomfort after infection, but that would have burned away by the time we made contact." Once in a syringe, she slowly injected the liquid into a vaccine bottle.

"Will that...change our DNA?" asked Berrezz of her at the door.

"No." She was sure, but even if she wasn't she spoke with so much convicting that it would have convinced his she was. "There's only a few, selected genes with absolutely no ability to bind to existing DNA. That alone will be enough the combat the Virus, both from a physical and a Force-sensitive standpoint."

He seemed content with that explanation, or at least the bit he understood - that no one would turn into a sithspawn, just rather walk away with some alchemized building block proteins. So he nodded and rose his comm. "This is Lieutenant Berrezz with NP Keeoli. We are in possession of a vaccine." The claim held not pride, but palatable solemnity, sour and heavy with guilt shared between the unlikely duo. "Repeat, we have a vaccine, but we don't have the means to produce more."

Word came in instantly from Command, from a technician rather than Terrik herself: "Affirmative, Omega Prime. Minister Locke does. Send me your coordinates and I'll get you transport into Jar'Kai."

Berrezz checked his compass. "At grid bravo L dash eight, lat forty five, distressed brothel. Be advised: distortion, one point oh-niner."

"Clear copy. Gunship dispatched. Watch the skies, and godspeed."

Next stop, Jar'Kai. There, she would tell John Locke John Locke all he needed to know.
 
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Taiia stood near Shamira and the Nightmother as the spell took effect, watching on with a satisfied smile then something she had never felt before, it stole her breathe and she turned away from the witches taking a few steps away to gather herself, the young redhead paused lowering her head. The Jedi had never truly prepared them for this aspect but how could they, the death of another was always a trauma it is why the Jedi preached no forming attachments, but attachment was itself part of being alive and part of the living force not something to be set aside, though such debates were for another time what she had felt was Voph breathing his last, his death. While she had not known him terribly long he was the first who brought her into the Confederacy who had welcomed her and brought her into the Knights Obsidian, and together they had met challenges and for his part had taught her much. A very dark thought entered her mind and wondered had she been with him instead of the Mandragora might he still be alive. The tears began to flow quietly, and she wiped her eyes trying to regain her composure, desperately trying to hold the emotion back she finally was able to give her pain voice.

“Nightmother, Voph is…” her voice quiet and very nearly broke completely just saying those two words, for one so young who has never experienced the loss of somebody she considered a mentor let alone somebody she might have called a friend she remained facing away from the witches “Send me to him please.” she managed barely, before Vytal before Shamira she could not manage to look at them in this moment, she was having to deal with entirely new and very unwelcome emotions while still attempting to finish the task that had been set out before them, were she alone she might have already broke down, sheer willpower stopping that from happening at the moment nothing of the force in it at all for once the force was far from her mind.

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C O N T A I N


Equipment: The Blood of Dathomir Armor | Nightmother's Ward | Water of Life Potions

Tag: Shamira Karuto Shamira Karuto | Taiia Locke Taiia Locke | John Locke John Locke | Prennis Keeoli Prennis Keeoli | Mandragora | Knights Obsidian
Many had passed. Many continued to pass. That some of those were known to Vytal Noctura did not change the still expression of the Nightmother as she stood in the palace chamber. Rituals of this nature had to be sustained, and she had taken up that responsibility to allow the rest assembled to stand watch. They were as much trapped inside the palace and the host of the enemy would ideally be trapped outside of it. Allowing them to roam would ensure their security, though the more that remain would share the burden of holding the magick in place.​
Vytal's voice was cool with a resonant quality while she hadn't moved from the place where the ritual had been conjured, "Go, Child. His story is not over yet." Without moving a muscle a tear in the air before the young Witch appeared. Its edges were rough and smoldered with a spectral mist. "Do not delay."
Someone with a practiced hand at recognizing and communing with spirits would see that Vytal did not stand alone. Aside from any Witch or Warlock that held her hand, there was another presence that watched the events transpiring through the Nightsister's eyes. It was that entity that extended the tunnel to the other location, interested in seeing Taiia's will manifested while the pale Witch herself was consumed by the ritual. It was only because of the motivation behind the young woman's request that it was granted. Asked to 'save' almost anyone else it would likely have gone unanswered. Salvaging an ancient man of story from being trapped in the next world suited its purposes -- or, perhaps, its amusement.​
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Template By: Darth Metus (Guy)
 

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She wasted no time stepping through the portal, not even a nod of gratitude she knew what she had asked was tasking the Nightmother more than was necessary but at the same time she would not leave him undefended to be consumed by the dead, they were very much still a threat and with that though fully manifest she pushed down several of the competing emotions of fear and sadness, what drove her at the moment was a fierce need to protect Voph and make sure that he was safe. Quickly emerging her eyes scanned the area, then she saw him and went to his side quickly secondly she saw his lightsaber reaching out through the force she pulled it to her waiting hand before clipping it to her belt, then finally she knelt at his side and looked at the wound placing a hand gently on it.​

“I am sorry I was not here to help” she said softly before lifting him up and throwing his arm over her shoulder and heading straight back to the portal, she would move quickly because she didn’t know if it was safe or not and then as if prompted by her own thoughts a few of the dead came at her. Why couldn't they just stay away, why did they need to attack right now? At this point her pain and rage became manifest and she reached out a hand to push them back, and instead of a wave of force energy what came was a cascade of force lighting as she touched the dark side really for the first time though she did not stop, knowing full well the power she was drawing on, she didn’t care she was angry and something would pay the price for her pain, it only lasted for seconds but it felt in her mind much longer before she regained control of herself. Pausing to look at the trio of dead charred and laying on the ground it, would likely not be enough to kill them but it would delay them well enough. She continued toward the portal then through, and then gently laid Voph on the ground in the palace at Jar’kai here at least he would be safe, relatively. She rose from the ground and nodded to the Nightmother silently, she could still feel the electricity coursing through her hand, all she said at that point was “Thank you. Close it quickly the dead are not far” otherwise the usual happy young woman was visibly disturbed by the days events, her mind a chaotic mess of emotions, she fixed her emerald eyes on the portal until it closed determined nothing would pursue them.​

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C O N T A I N



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Objective: Quarantine Xam'chi
Time: 1030
Equipment: VAARS Rifle, Tactical Recon Handguns (2), Personal Armor, CryoBan Grenade (4), Thermal Detonator (2)
Ally tags: | Tiria Reinhart Tiria Reinhart | Damsy Callat Damsy Callat | Tobias Wrynn | Maeve Archeron Maeve Archeron | Anakwor Farlorn Anakwor Farlorn | Jasmille Kavos Jasmille Kavos | Jrurki Liz Jrurki Liz | Kurenai Yumi Kurenai Yumi | The Monster The Monster | Kaden Farr Kaden Farr | Alessandra Creed Alessandra Creed | Prennis Keeoli Prennis Keeoli | John Locke John Locke | Subject 73 Red Subject 73 Red | Kyyrk Kyyrk | Tsian Denira Tsian Denira | Eira Talon | Srina Talon Srina Talon | Gerwald Lechner Gerwald Lechner | Darth Empyrean Darth Empyrean |
Enemy tags: | @Xam’chi enemies | Slaad Slaad | Grrwunhoooll Agaburry Grrwunhoooll Agaburry |
Post: #6

"General, we've arrived at the camp."

"Dauntless Command, Alpha Actual, Alpha and Omega on return. Objectives secured."

“Commander, we’ve secured the VIP. Returning to base.”

Well, it seemed as though the good news was beginning to flow in now. Reports from multiple locations, including the resort on top of the mountain, the government building, and one of her master sergeants missions all seemed to be coming back decently well. Of course, Luna was keeping up with the casualties numbers that were coming in as well. They seemed to be low enough, which would be encouraging enough if looked at by itself. However, when those numbers and casualties were put together, and the number of the people in the city that should be accounted for came forward, then it was a much more grim picture that was being painted. It was nice to rescue a large number of people, but it was only a large number with no perspective.

They had made pushes. Even won in some of the little battles. But was the war too far gone? Was it time to just end the game where everything stood?

It was beginning to look like that the city was lost. As much as Luna wanted to be optimistic about the situation, to say that they could just quarantine everything and keep the city under control, the situation was starting to seem untenable. The words that had come from the doctor before she had decided to leave the tent had also been gnawing at the her mind the entire time that Luna had spent staring at this map of the city. Even the reports of good news were doing little to actually quell the dark cloud that had begun to grow over her mind.

The situation with Damsy, to which there had been no update from the man she had sent to grab her body, seemed as though it weighing more than anything else on her consciousness. It was becoming clear to her that the best she could do was allow the rest of her teams to return, the last of the scouting parties to finish their jobs, and the quarantine camp to be fully prepared, before beginning to consider the options of clearing the entire city with one fell swoop. Perhaps there would be blowback. Maybe she would get reprimanded for not being able to quell the outbreak better than it had been. But Luna was not about to allow this city to become a walking graveyard, one that spread to the rest of this planet and overtook it’s beauty.

If this city had to be burned to the ground, so be it. It would not be the place to make the rest of this planet suffer. The disease, one way or another, would be stopped here. This was the train of thought going through the Dauntless’ commanders mind, which led her to looking over to one of the younger officers in the tent, giving him a nod to get his attention. “Get me a line to inferno command.” The fighter squadron specifically designed to reign cleansing fire down upon a target. A last resort. But now it was beginning to look like a last resort was needed.

“It’s open, ma’am.” He responded, prompting Luna to give him another grim, thankful nod. A clearing of her throat stilled her nerves to give the order, proceeding with, “major, spin up your squadron. Be ready to fly within the next ten minutes. I’ll be giving the order personally when it’s time.” She barely even her his response over the sound of her own heart beginning to pound. Giving the order to raise a city was no easy task, and only a miracle could save Xam’chi at this point. Perhaps giving it a new start, ending the city’s history here and now, would allow a new, better story to bloom out of the ashes of this disaster.

Perhaps then, it was good that she had held off ordering the cleansing just yet. The voice of the doctor, speaking to one of the redhead’s younger communication officers, began to cut through the dark fog that had formed. It was Berrezz that had spoken as well, puzzling the commander. Why in the world was the sergeant anywhere near the doctor? Better yet, why was the doctor anywhere near the government building? Luna was close to grabbing the headset herself and chewing out both of them for not being where she told them to be.

“We are in possession of a vaccine."

Luna stopped just short of the officer, the look shared between them speaking volumes of skepticism and tentative excitement. He then gave her a look of questioning, one she was only able to respond with a nod toward. The officer then proceeded to tell the pair that a shuttle was coming. It was at this point that Luna leaned forward, moving the officer aside with a slight push. He quickly stepped to the side, realizing what the commander was needing to ask.

“Sergeant…we have a shuttle coming to you as we speak. But I need to know how your mission went..what the task I sent on, how did it go….” There was no dancing around the subject, Luna needed to know. Of course, the vaccine was the best news that could have possibly come out. But that was handled. She knew exactly what was going to come of that. There was still an unknown in this whole thing that had not been accounted for.

“Where is captain Callat?”


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Caedyn Arenais

Guest
C
Affiliation: Asaraa Vaashe Asaraa Vaashe & The Confederacy of Independent Systems.
Objective: Keep Asaraa safe and help the local populace.
Location: Xhi'cam, Capital of Atrisia.
Equipment: Jedi Armor | Lightsaber.

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As Caedyn's gaze looked across the street in the direction of where Asaraa Vaashe Asaraa Vaashe was pointing, he reluctantly nodded, having suspected, and dreaded as much. "Have there been many reports of the infected attacking people?", These stumbling ghastly looking figures swayed in their movements, as though their consciousness was lost amidst a dream; to some extent, that wasn't far from the truth, their souls had passed on into that eternal sleep. Or at least Caedyn hoped for their sake.

"If we're forced to engage those things on the way to this Grand Marshal of yours, are you going to be okay?" he asked Asaraa, already seeing the look of horror over her as she watched the lifeless husks. Was it fear, sadness or disgust that she wore upon her face, perhaps a mix of all of them. Caedyn had been reluctant to ask, but he needed to be sure she'd hold her own if they were caught off guard.

"Whatever's going on here, if those People come at you, I need you to put yourself first" he told her. Asking a Jedi to act selfishly wasn't something typical for Caedyn, but in this case it was the girl he loved over the infected whom were a stark shadow of their former, more natural and lively selves.

Only the Force could know what level of damage this epidemic would wreck across Atrisia's economy and population. Caedyn couldn't help but question the death count in his mind, seeing only a handful of what he assumed were actually out there. "I'm starting to wish I'd spent more time with the Silver's in their Science Division now..." He added, trying to lighten the mood, albeit unsuccessfully.
 

Kirk Tektus

Guest
K

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Location: Waru Operations Base, Quarantine Center, Bound for Xam'Chi
Wearing: Officer Uniform
Tagging: Luna Terrik Luna Terrik
The guilt was still sinking in, Kirk was still sulking, his stomach churning causing him to vomit on the floor relieving him of some of his pain. Eventually he collected himself and just sat back in his chair allowing to sooth himself a bit. Eventually a few of Viceroy Nagarth's Guards approached him, honest with their intentions as one of them spoke. "The viceroy has ordered that if you were to break from pressure or turn from the infection that we would be authorized to execute you." Yeah that seemed reasonable, Kirk didn't even flinch as the guards stood before him ready to point their guns at him. But it didn't matter, he could be killed or turn now but it wouldn't make a difference. His thousand yard stare aimed nowhere as he pondered on dying now, he could've taken his blaster out now and put himself down now and as he did the guards pointed their blaster rifles at him just as he went for his holster and pondered even further. Nothing would ever justify what he just did, but he would have to wait for the maker to decide what was to be done with him, he had a job to do. Xam'Chi was still covered in those things and Kirk was sitting on a base large enough to relieve it.

Kirk stood up and brushed his uniform of some lingering vomit that easily got off. He regained his posture and walked out of quarantine unsure if the guards should follow him, but Kirk eventually made his way to the Command Center, he had to relieve Xam'Chi. He sped his way into the command center and walked in aggressively, "Officer on deck!" said one of the junior officers as everyone stood to attention. "At ease." Kirk ordered before everyone gathered around the holoprojector where Kirk brought up a map of Xam'Chi. "Alright guys, we've enjoyed being cooped up here, but now we have to take the fight to them. Our allies have been deployed to Xam'Chi and now we have to aid them in taking back the city. I am going to be aiding the viceroy in this endeavor and I need you guys to aid in coordinating this effort. How are in army composition?"

"We have an H1 Battle Droid battalion on standby commander, we can mobilize them quickly and have them ready when you give the word sir."

"Excellent? Do we have any strongholds in the city?"

"Some Dauntless have consolidated in a base in the city, they've been held up there and using it as a command post to coordinate Dauntless teams and other allies on the ground."


"Then that's gonna be our drop point. Establish communications with the palace and notify me once we've established connection. In the meantime get our droids mobilized. Dismissed."

Once that was done, Kirk left the command center to find Credius Credius and they had to get the suppressants to a safe location where they could distribute it. But before that, one of the base's surveillance personnel stood and spoke aloud, "Sir. There's been a disturbance at the quarantine center."

"What sort of disturbance ensign?"


"We don't know sir but... its been destroyed."

"What about the viceroy?"

Only a shake of the head confirmed his worst suspicions. Now they didn't have a virus suppressor and the city was bound to fall. "Sir what do we do?" The officer asked who was just in much confusion and shock as the commander was. At what seemed like their darkest hour, one of the Valkan guards approached Kirk and saluted him. "What is it captain?" He asked making his grief known.

"Before he passed, the Viceroy instructed us to distribute the suppressant to the people of Xam'Chi and to follow your orders Commander Tektus."

As it seemed too good to be true, the commander and a few officers rushed out the command center and saw what remained of the Valkan guards standing in formation saluting the commander with a few in the front holing the suppressants. Kirk's confidence was reignited and he had to move now. "Lieutenant get some shuttles ready to transport the droids and the Valkan Guards. And get me in contact with Dauntless immediately."

"Roger that sir!"


As his junior officers went back to the command center, Kirk now had to address the Valkan Guards. "You have all performed your duty admirably and I believe the viceroy would be more than proud of what you and your fallen comrades have done. I know some of you are exhausted and tired from dealing with this plague and using your comrades to the virus. But right now we have the chance to ensure the virus can't harm anyone else. The Confederacy and its people will never forget what you have done for it and I am asking you for one final push just as the viceroy would've done. So join me as we take the fight to the infected to secure a future for our people and the galaxy that one day they will know peace!"

A resounding salute was displayed by the remnants of the Valkan guards, which was what Kirk needed to assure them. "Captain we're gonna be assisting Dauntless in this endeavor. All I ask is that you protect those suppressants with your life."

"Roger that sir. ALRIGHT MEN GET ON THOSE SHUTTLES LETS MOVE!"


With that out of the way, Kirk went to the armory and equipped himself with a blast vest and a BAW-88 and made his way to the shuttles where the guards and droids were loaded up in the Quill-class shuttles and Kirk got aboard with the Valkan guards with the suppressant. When given the approval, the shuttles took off and made their way to the base. Eventually, Kirk received a transmission from his headquarters. "Commander. We've patched you into the dauntless unit in Xiaolong."

"This is Commander Tektus of the CDF Navy with reinforcements bound for Xam'Chi. To whom am i speaking to?"

Luna Terrik Luna Terrik

 
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Confederate Dauntless Colonel
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Farlorn's Forlorn
S A V E

Captain Anakwor Farlorn
Caria First-and-Only "Forlorn" Ranger Regiment
Tags: Luna Terrik Luna Terrik Damsy Callat Damsy Callat Tiria Reinhart Tiria Reinhart
Location: Xam'chin, Slums, Marketplace
Objecteive: Retreat

Third Platoon was checking out the back of the marketplace. It was the place where butchers had congregated, away from the central chambers, right next to the loading bay. It had been done so that the goods wouldn’t have long from the refrigerated chambers of the cargo trucks to the freezers of the meat-sellers. The market’s floor had been stained brick-red by the decades of blood that had seeped in. Drainage holes were dotted often in the ground, though many had been clogged up by fat and dried blood. The meat was still left out in melted ice baths and on hooks, slowly beginning to spoil. Vermin was beginning to creep in, attracted by the enticing smell.

The lights flickered often here, and in some areas, were completely out. Power stations around the slums were beginning to fail without their workforce to keep them running. The Captain had detached a few soldiers to try to maintain them but it was a losing battle with their lack of manpower and expertise. The whole place was grim with a deep sense of foreboding.

It didn’t help that Syna’s section had just announced contact with an unknown force, currently being investigated. They knew almost nothing about it and the waiting for more news was the worst. Waiting was the worst enemy a soldier would ever face. Waiting did something far more dangerous to the common ground trooper than any super-weapon in existence, it gnawed deeper into your skin than any blaster, gnawing at your soul itself. A nauseating that started in your gut before it crawled into your head. Bred doubts and fears more than enemy propaganda.

The Third Platoon of First Battalion was under the command of one Lieutenant Pradesh. A well and cleanly handsome, young, only twenty-three, and a man well-liked by his men. He was green, only having his promotion in the recent battle of Taanab. It had been the proudest moment of his life, that day when Captain Farlorn went around with medals and commissions.

Farlorn had placed a lot of faith in promoting the young grunt, choosing him over some of the more senior members of the platoon because he had seen potential in him. He had placed a lot of responsibility on Pradesh and he wasn’t going to let the Captain down any time soon.

Pradesh was running checks on his men as he made the rounds of the butcher’s quarters. He tried to cheer them up, telling many that there would be much drink and medals at the end of all of this. That didn’t really work, the drab terrible mood of the rain was an oppressive feeling on them all. The mystery of the whole affair didn’t help either. Where had all the slum residents gone? The vagueness and impossibility of it all was seeping right into them.

Pradesh found Trooper Mehil at the back of the quarter, sitting on a wooden crate and leaning on a wall, his head drooping. His rifle cradled in his hands. He didn’t seem to react to the Lieutenant as he approached and remained dead limp.

“Wake up, you chit-eater.” Pradesh knocked hard with his fist on Mehil’s helmet. The trooper started sharply and looked up with what Pradesh assumed to be annoyance but he really couldn’t tell behind the treated gas hood. “Sleeping on posting is a dereliction of duty. Dereliction of duty is punishable by summary field execution.”

“You wouldn’t do that, would you, Pra, would you?” Mehil moaned. He was infamous for being a lazy son of a gun. This was quite despite the fact that he had three commendations for battlefield bravery by the Captain. He was also a well-known brewer of drink in the regiment, being able to make the sweet lost Carian wine. He was so far the only one that could make it like it used to be.

“Oh, I would, you useless Hutt-spawn. Keep like this and you’ll end up as fat as one.”

“Ouch,” Mehil said in mock injury. “Thought we were friends, Pra.”

“We are, just can’t stand your lazy ass. Like is it too much to ask for you just to stroll about the area and call anything strange in, rather than just pick an empty spot to take a nap?” Pradesh paused. “Yeah, that’s too much to ask. Why the hell did I ever make you my adjutant”

“Hey!” Menhil exclaimed, this time in real insult. Ever since Taanab, there had been a real tension between the two. Pradesh had no idea what was up with him, but Menhil was there that day.

The air had been dry that day, just in the wake of their victory. He remembered that clearly. Dry enough to make you feel parched after just a few breathes. Dust was being kicked up by the advance.

The rest of the Confederate forces had pushed forward toward the capital as the Rangers took their rest and began the unfortunate task of counting the dead. Lieutenant Souris of Third Platoon was counted among them. A shell filled with dirty material had hit an apartment block that he and the first squad was occupying. It took a long, long time for them to die. Chief Medic Beka had been adamant to try to save them despite everything. Farlorn eventually made the choice and gave them mercy. He had visited every single one of them with a chaplain, sat next to them as they made their final confession, and spoke along with the chaplain as he absolved them of their sins. Then he did the deed himself. He had made the decision himself and it was only right that he did it himself. No-one else needed to bear it but him.

If Menhil could remember clearly from the rumors, his last words before he had completed the final action were “You served your duty, now let me serve mine.”

After that, there had been an opening for the commander of the Second Platoon. Menhil had been the picked messenger for that day since their comms were acting up and Bellary was in the infirmary for a hipshot he had taken as they were digging out remnant forces.

And he had been there on the other side of the door when he had heard the Captain talking to Company First Lieutenant Killearn. He had been another recent promotion, the previous 1stL having fallen in the early stage of the battle. The Rangers had taken heavy losses that week, losses that they could never ever replace.

“Souris, may he rest. Have you found a replacement?” The voices had been muffled through the door and Menhil had placed his ear to it, keeping an eye on the hallway.

“Yes, though honestly, I’m not sure anyone will ever fill his boots.” He had licked his lips in anticipation.

“Pradesh?” He had frozen.

“I would, Pradesh showed himself and I’m very impressed,” Killearn had said, “but the commission should be Menhil’s. Seniority and rank.”

“Go with your heart. If you trust Pradesh, make it Pradesh. Never compromise. That’s your first lesson, Killearn, they’ll be more to come. Menhil’s a big boy with big pants. He’ll get over it.”

But Menhil never did.

And to make it all worse, Pradesh had made Menhil his adjutant. His second-in-command, responsible for taking his place should circumstances be difficult. It felt condescending, like a pity prize like he was being thrown scraps of a meal that really should be his. Of course, Pradesh never really meant it but it sure hurt.

But Menhil would try to work with his old friend. Despite his reputation, he was a damn good trooper if it came to it-
He heard something, on the edge of his hearing. Sharp senses, he was nearly picked for the pathfinder corp after Taanab but Pradesh had fought hard to keep his second next to him. And now it was paying off. It was a metallic dragging sound, like steel fingernails on a chalkboard.

“It’s the truth, Menhil, you’re just a-”

“Shut up!” Menhil whispered softly and grabbed his rifle. He motioned to his head to a steel sliding door behind him that lead outside. “We got anyone outside?”

“Not in this rain,” He clicked the safety of his carbine and activated his comms, “1st Section, on my position, on the double.”

Ten troopers appeared suddenly around the corner. Lagging behind them was Flametrooper Falwase, slapping the side of her flamer.

“Problem?” Menhil asked her.

“Guidance burners shorting out on me. Think its the moisture in the air.”

“Fix it,” Pradesh “Trooper Menhil, take point.”

Menhil nodded and stalked over to the door. Few of the Rangers were better than him in storm clearance. He was fast and ruthless. He opened a small gap and peered through. He couldn’t see much in the drizzling rain outside. He looked back.

“Call it,” Pradesh told his second. Whatever grievances Menhil had with the Lieutenant, he had to admit that if not him, Pradesh was a good choice. Here, with no clear view of his own, he was devolving command to his second, trusting his friend and point man to order the deployment.

“Right, it looks like we got an alleyway out there. Munala, Azah, and I will take the right. Falwase, hang back and provide support. Rest of you, take the right.” He gripped the handle of the door. “Ready?”

The rusting wheels on the door screamed loudly as the door flew open, Menhil being the first one through. They had emerged into one of the alleyways behind the market, used as an auxiliary entrance for the goods to come in. Towering buildings flanked them and the rain kept pouring on. There were a few dotted green dumpsters with thick clouds of flies swarming around them. The lamps here were failing and the end of the alleyway was barely lit.

His rifle was up and sweeping, searching for any movement. Any shadow could be inhabited with foes. He stayed low, reducing his profile and made careful to not contrast himself too sharply from the ambient light.

Pradesh called out loudly. “Identify yourself! Confederate forces! We’re here to help you!”

No one replied. They kept creeping forward. They saw no-one. Menhil groaned silently, he had heard wrongly and he had made a big bother for no reason at all. Kriff, that was going to be the subject of much locker talk. Menhil losing his touch and jumping at shadows.

“Maybe I was-” Menhil began to say.

And just like that, like a conjuring trick, the alleyway suddenly wasn’t empty at all.

The rainy freezing air was thick with blaster shots that steamed the very air, whizzing around them like a firework display.

There was no cover, no cover at all, not even a single patch of it.

Menhil watched as Munala let out a long, sad sigh as he fell over. As he landed, limbs spasming, he saw the ghastly ruin that was the back of his head. His skull case had been forced out through the back of his shaved scalp in thick, white splinters and ripped right through his hood. Cormin smashed over with a loud cough as his neck was exploded. Azah squealed as she was hit three times in the stomach and had her knee blown out. She fell down on his hands and knees, and her shrill noises ceased abruptly as another blaster-bolt blew the top of her head in.

Menhil was up and firing at full-auto down the corridor a full two seconds before Pradesh gave the order. Jantine was firing practiced bursts. The other ten troopers began raking the corridor. Falwase struggled with her flamethrower, swearing loudly.

“Holy kriffing chit!” Pradesh was roaring as he shot. “Formation! Fire! Fire! Kill them!”

They could not even see what they were shooting. Just the thick, unfathomable darkness save for the glittering fizzling blaster fire coming their way and killing them.

Menhil dropped to his knees and stopped his full-auto. It would do nothing but waste his ammunition faster and make his shots go wild. He chased his aim towards the source of the shots, the muzzle flashes, and snapped off sharp burst after burst. He didn’t flinch as blaster bolts danced all around him. It was something you got when you had been through enough battles. Killed enough people. At a certain point, you stopped caring about death staring you right in the face.

One trooper was slammed against the wall by nearly twenty-two rounds and slid down, leaving behind a blood trail on the wall. His clothes started to burn and Menhil was suddenly thankful for the hoods, burnt flesh smelled terrible.

“Get down!” Falwase screamed. “Get the Kriff down!”

They all dropped down into a crouch but kept firing. Falwase lifted up her flamethrower, the ignition torch sputtering for a moment before a solid spear of flame thrashed forward down the alleyway. It howled and shrieked as she swept it left and right, burning out the rat-holes. Menhil saw in the darkness, solid figures of fire still shooting. It didn’t seem possible. That couldn’t be right. What type of person could be on fire and still fight?

Flames almost as hot as the heart of the star burned down the hallway. The onslaught only stopped when the fire melted the figures and they collapsed, fusing bone into syrupy pools.

“Cease!” Pradesh cried. “Damn it, Falwase stop! They’re down.”

When the flames died down, dripping and sizzling down the walls, there was no other sound than the downpour all around them. The heat had been so great that the brick walls around them had melted. Blood was being rapidly washed away into the gutters, mixed in with a strange black viscous liquid.

“Skrog…” breathed out Pradesh. He looked around. Four of them were dead. Munala, Cormin, Azah and a troopers name he didn’t remember. He realized with heavy guilt, that he would never learn his name. Four dead, in what seemed to be less than thirty seconds? His team cut in half.

Just as he was about to call it in, he heard blaster fire behind him. It was coming right out of the doorway to the alleyway. The rapid chattering of blaster fire and the swoosh of flamers, mixed in with panicked yells. Pradesh was the first this time to react. “Double time!” He ordered with a voice of steel. “Back in! Back in!”

Pradesh was the first one to leap right back. He looked up and saw blaster bolts flying above the stalls like a multicolored firework show. The shots poked holes, allowing water to fall right in. In the distance, on the other side of the great market, an entire section of the rooting roof collapsed in a great scream of metal.

“What’s going on? What’s going on, damn it!” Pradesh yelled into the comms. It was chaos. Reports of chaos simply everywhere. Nothing made sense at all.

“What’s going on!”

***​

Lord help us!

Everywhere!

Why aren’t they dying!

Flamers don’t stop them! They don’t stop them!

What are we fighting?


Captain Farlorn’s headset was crazy with nonsense traffic, panic-calls, hysteria. Moving northwards, he and Fennstrum’s Arnarch company double-timed it over a large round-about before the marketplace. Five elite pathfinders along with pathfinder-master Hark advanced with them. The sky was nearly dark as they dodged in between abandoned cars and speeders. In the middle of the concourse, there was an elevated stone plinth with a statue of some old leader that Farlorn didn’t care much about. Some Emperor from ages long past. The heavy rain was halting vision heavily and soaking right to the bone.

“Yes, Killearn, you damn well heard me. Withdraw at once from the marketplace.” He turned to his comms-officer who was struggling to keep with the brisk pace. “Bellary, can you get me a connection with the High Marshall?”

“Kinda, connection’s bad. It’s the fizz.”

“Nevermind that, inform the High Marshall that the Ranger’s First Battalion Second Company has met heavy resistance in the Bein Taili market in the eastern end of the slum area. I am withdrawing my forces to a better position. If I require assistance, I will notify her but for now, the situation is being dealt with. Level five delegation.”

“That’s all sir?”

“That’s all, Bell.” He switched his comms to wide-band so that Anarch Company could hear him. “Form up a corridor perimeter from the entrance through the concourse southwards. Be ready for medical casualties.”

He saw the Rangers begin to funnel out from under the covered arches of the marketplace. Some turned back and fired bursts from the doorway, waving those that remained to quickly come. Soon, nearly all the hundred or so Rangers in the marketplace were out. Some were injured by blaster-fire and weapons. Four had been bitten and confirmed by corpsman Jantine to be compromised. Farlorn had handcuffs placed on each one of them and their weapons confiscated. They simply nodded as the deed was done and even joked, but it was clear that they were trying to hide their fear at what was to come.

“Any in late stages?” Farlorn asked as Jantine appeared through the crowd again, helping a trooper with a broken arm. “We know that in some it progresses quickly.”

“None so far, sir.”

“You know what must be done if they enter the late stages, corpsman. If the time comes for them, tell me and I’ll do it myself.”

“Yessir.”

Farlorn quickly turned as he sighted Company Commander Killearn in the crowd. “Is everyone out? Rolecall?”

“Yes but we did lose lives.”

“How many.”

“I lost three men and I can’t account for one, though he was last seen in melee with the infected so I presume he’s gone.” He looked downwards. Farlorn could already see what he was thinking. His first combat situation and real command and he had failed.

“You did will, Killearn, despite the bad situation. Sometimes we just get into a bad situation with our backs turned. It happens. Just know you’ve done your duty.”

“Thank you, sir.”

“Now continue to command the withdrawl-” He began and was cut off.

There was a sudden noise, a voice, followed quickly by gunfire. One of the picket pathfinders is running towards them, yelling loudly as he fired bursts from his hip to unseen targets shrouded by the mist. He ducked between the cars as a rain blaster fire that materialized out of the fog. Windows shattered and car bodies bent under the sudden onslaught.

“Hostiles! Hostiles!” Farlorn recognized the voice over the comms as Pathfinder Gavin. “Dozens of them coming our way east.”

Lightning flashed and fizzled above them like a strobing light. At a hundred meters, dark shapes started to appear. They weren’t friendly, far from it. The Rangers fire back, snapping shots from their corner of the round-about. The rain steamed as it was filled with the laced crossfire of hundreds of blaster bolts. The mist seemed to thicken as the brutal firefight stirred the air.

“First platoon,” Farlorn ordered. “Peel off from the retreat and counter eastwards towards the attack. On my position. Triple time it!”

The attack was sloppy. They were simply just running at them as they fired. Their shots were wild and inaccurate. He saw several of the emerging figures twist and collapse. One of the Rangers next to him took a hit to the head. He fell and spasmed. His legs kicking as his ruined brain struggled to comprehend what was happening.

Farlorn fired into the mist with his trusty BAW-55. He felt it kick and jerk his hand back every time it fired. His sheathed officer’s vibrosword clanked on the side of his leg every time he fired. He dropped four that emerged out of the fog.
“Hold this ground!” He yelled loudly so that everyone near him could hear him. “Protect the retreat!”

He heard a loud grinding sound close to him, just a few cars ahead of him. A figure suddenly appeared from behind a car barely ten meters in front of him. He got a good first look at who they were fighting. His face was pale and sunken. Its clothes were in tatters, so much so that it might as well not have bothered at all. Then again, Farlorn doubted it could even think. Its teeth were all gone, showing only yellow puss filled gums. Its eyes were glossed over entirely black. It was missing its right arm, which was oozing thick black blood. In its left hand it held a blaster pistol with a makeshift bayonet, a kitchen knife taped to its side.

Before the Captain of the Rangers could fire, it began to spray on full-auto at him, forcing him to duck down quickly and adding wet haze fuming the air. He felt the car shake under the barrage. The moment he felt it cease he stood back up and saw the infected scrambling over bonnets and roofs, like an animal.

It was barely a meter away when Farlorn shot it in the face and it went over like a sack of bricks. Specks of blood splattered on his cold gas hood.

More and more were emerging out of the fog. Dozens were quickly turning into hundreds. They massacred the foe as they came closer and closer, but they refused to stop. Something in their rotting addled brains was compelling them to continue to advance in such a way that shamed even the most tenacious and disciplined soldiers of the Galaxy. They may be sloppy with their tactics and poor on their aim but they would never stop coming. This was an enemy that could not be compelled to retreat nor be forced to surrender. They would never know fear or doubt. They could only think of one thing.

Kill anything that moved.

The only way this fight would ever end was if they would kill them all.

Every, single, one.

They were getting closer and closer, in greater and greater numbers. The rain was making it harder and harder, concealing the foe until they were too close.

“Attach bayonets!” He heard Fennstrum order on the wide-band. “Give them the cold steel!”

The sudden attack was rotating the Carian retreat. Farlorn, Hark, Fennstrum, with the first platoon, was rapidly being isolated and being pushed to the northern end of the advance. Enemy troopers were suddenly among their formation. Manholes had been ripped aside and hordes of infected were crawling out.

Hark saw one of the covers opened up near her. The first thing the infected saw as it crawled out was a silver flash and it saw itself looking at booted toes. It’s darting eyes were just in time to witness his decapitated corpse tumble back into the hole. Hark grabbed a grenade off her vest and dropped it into the black abyss.

There was a satisfying crump followed by a dust cloud of grit that erupted from the hole. Hark saw two figures running towards her through the mist. She didn’t need to ask if they were friendly. Their movements were jerky as they lunged forwards toward the sound. Her first burst threw the first straight off its feet. Her second burst hit it right in the chest. It staggered forward a few steps before recovering, though it jerked more violently. Its partner had also gotten up.

She adjusted her aim. This time she slammed multiple shots into their heads. This time they didn’t get up.

“Aim for the head!” She said over the wide-band. “Drops them quick and clean. They don’t go down easily otherwise. Sure as sure.”

Fennstrum, ducking in between cars as he popped up to fire occasional bursts. He had been separated from his command platoon by a sudden attack from below. Now, alone, he was retreating north towards the market. He heard a scrambling noise beneath his feet and jabbed down with his bayonet just in time to impale the head of the infected crawling from underneath a car. He began to hear the loud repetitive chatter of full-auto. In places among the cars, he saw the rapid jumping petals of muzzle flashes. The Rangers are damn good soldiers but he knew they were starting to panic as the foe, one that refused to go down easily, was coming closer and closer. Full-auto was great for shock and noise but they were inaccurate and not the most efficient tactic. A single five-minute-long engagement on full-auto burned through ammunition faster than three days of sporadic fighting.

He silently cursed himself for not instilling fire discipline more strongly in the soldiers. That would be something he would fix when they got out of here.

If they got out of here.

“Captain,” Fennstrum yelled northwards to where he presumed Farlorn and the rest of First Platoon. “Captain Farlorn! Tell the men to fire on burst or-”
He threw himself down as his loud voice attracted violent enemy fire. Two or three infected were moving on him. He tried to shout again but the shrill whining of blaster fire drowned him out. They were getting closer. Glass shattered into thousands of glittering diamonds.

He could hear them speaking. They were jabbering foul streams of obscenity. It was some disgusting language that could barely be spoken from their lips. It was broken and chattering, brutal and shrill. Some language long lost to the Galaxy for good reason. It was insanity. What were they fighting? It was somehow Fennstrum feel sick and want to hurl.

He heard the blaster shots ping and ricochet off the body the car. The blaster fire was intensifying. He had to think quickly or they would be in his position.

He dropped to his belly and peered under the cars. Two cars away, he saw two pairs of booted feet quickly walking towards him. Almost right on top of him. He aimed and shot off the right foot of the closet pair of feet. It’s owner collapsed right down. Fennstrum saw its face as it stared right back at him. A face swollen with tumors and bloody sores roared right at him. Without hesitation or shock, he destroyed it with his blaster.

But he didn’t have time for the other one.

He heard a dull sound from the body of the truck. He tucked his rifle close to him and rolled under the body just in time as an infected appeared over the lip of the car’s hood to spray down on where he had just been, throwing up grit and steam. Fennstrum came out on the other side of the car and saw the back of the infected. He placed a burst that destroyed the back of its head.

He got to his feet and began running again. Loose shots were wailing over his head. Farlorn and Hark had set up a defensive position around a group of large trucks and cars with what remained of first platoon. Infected were pouring out of the front of the marketplace and they were gunning them down as they attempted to crawl out. The auto-fire madness that had been present some minutes ago had been replaced by calm accurate shots now that the Captain and Pathfinder-master was on site.

Fennstrum found Farlorn on the side of the defense facing the center of the concourse. He was yelling at the top of his lungs as he directed fire onto important targets. Any that got to close he dispatched with his pistol. As much as the Major hated the commander, he could at least respect the fact that he led from the front and by example. It was something that he could find positive in the I-had-an-iron-rod-shoved-up-my-ass-when-I-was-born Commander.

“Major,” Farlorn said sarcastically. He blew the front of an infected head off into matted chunks. His saber clattered on his side. “Pleasure you could join us.”

“We’ve been cut off. About a hundred hostiles segmented our line in half. How are you doing?”
“I’ve managed rally about thirty-five men. Most from the first platoon and those that scattered from the initial attack. Losses?” He said simply but Fennstrum noted how the grim undertone in his voice.

“That I know of? About half a dozen men so far. We made them pay though.”

“We’re being pushed further and further.” Said Farlorn. He turned around and waved over his comms-officer Bellary, carrying the heavy-duty unit on his back. “Bellary, can you get in contact with Killearn and his section?”

“No, sir. The rain’s heavily interfering with any connection. Also,” He unslung his set and placed it on the ground. Right in the center of the set a blaster bolt had hit it, it had undoubtedly saved his life but it had fried every single component. “This is also a bit of a small issue. So, we’re down to short-range comms.”

“Chit,” Farlorn breathed.

“Orders, commander?” Hark said as she slid over the hood of the car. She landed, firing into the fog.

“We don’t have the number to hold until the retreating elements can turn back and fight.” Farlorn knelt down and closed his eyes, thinking as fast as he could. Why did he and his Rangers always get put in the worst situations? “And even if we did, we would be unable to coordinate carefully with the fizzling effect of the rain on our comms, combined with the fact our comms are short range. Bellary, you have the data-maps of the area right?”

“Yessir.” He handed him the data slate.

“Here’s the plan, we cut east into these buildings.” He pointed eastwards to a large group of prefab apartment complexes. “Being in the open like this leaves us far too vulnerable to the swarms. We’ll find a way back to friendly lines from there.”

“We have to move as one,” Hark pointed out. “Or sections will be isolated and destroyed.”

“Noted, Hark.” He turned to his ruthless second. “Fennstrum, Get the men ready to move. We’ll be making a straight break for it. Tell the men, whatever happens, don’t stop running, not even if their comrades fall beside them.” He said coldly.

They held the perimeter for five more minutes as Fennstrum ran about, informing them of their plan. During that time they slayed dozens more until there seemed to be a break in the seemingly unending wave. Their chance had come.

“Rangers of Caira,” He reloaded his pistol. The rain was somehow getting worse. But there was something fighting it in the air. Something that had lifted the spirits of the Lost despite the terrible trauma they had gone through. Something that carried them to greater and greater deeds of glory in their search to make a difference with what little they had. “You wanna live forever?”

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Subject 73 Red

We're more ghosts than people.
Objective: Await new orders.
Tags: Luna Terrik Luna Terrik

Red walked through the camp. It was makeshift, and obviously constructed very quickly, and had very little in terms of defense, but it would do. If there was an attack from infected larger than the one they experienced at the resort, they might not be able to hold it, despite all of the troops here and possible reinforcements. If there was a horde large enough to overrun the camp, there wouldn't be enough time or resources to be able to evacuate all personnel, and they would have to leave all of the equipment behind. A quick evacuation of the camp was basically impossible. Still, they were still up and functioning, so all they could do was focus on the present.

Red managed to get directions to where General Terrik was from a friendly but exhausted medic passing by. Red walked towards the tent. Red could sense through the Force all of the pain and death. It was... intense, to say the least. But Red was able to tune it out, another perk of his experimental upbringing. Still, Red would know it was there, even if he could tune it out.

Red entered the tent. He noticed multiple officers at their stations. Most of them were too busy and submerged in their work to notice Red's entrance. It was kind of what he expected, they would just view him as another soldier. He noticed General Terrik's figure out of the officers. Red approached her. "General Terrik. Red, reporting in." Red said, giving a quick salute before letting his arm drop back to his side. He still had his helmet on. He was unsure if it was safe to take it off or not, so he went with the safer option: keeping it sealed tight. "Sorry I- uh, couldn't managed to take the mountain resort. The infected there had far more power than us, and we were overpowered. Another mission there with more troops and stronger firepower could turn beneficial, and might be able to secure the resort. At least, that is what I have managed to deduce from the limited intel and from the encounter we had. The infected there seem to prefer to move in large groups and to strike in those large groups." He reported. "Anyways, awaiting new orders." He said. He didn't want to sit around and do nothing, not when there was so much still going on, so many places where he could help, so many things he could do. Besides, Red didn't really need a break from the action, he was genetically made for combat, after all.
 
Confederate Dauntless Colonel

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Farlorn's Forlorn
S A V E

Captain Anakwor Farlorn
Caria First-and-Only "Forlorn" Ranger Regiment
Tags: Luna Terrik Luna Terrik Damsy Callat Damsy Callat Tiria Reinhart Tiria Reinhart
Location: Xam'chin, Slums, Industrial Area
Objective: Survive
An absolute downpour was smashing into Xam’Chi from the sea. Gales like a hurricane swept through the slum areas. Rooftops had been ripped off, flying randomly in this insane storm, and even a few poorly built buildings had tipped over and collapsed. Heavy trucks were moving of their own accord.​
But none of this destruction was compared to what was going on in the concourse before Bein Taili market. Blaster fire steamed through the air and whizzed close to heads to the thirty-five Rangers making a break for the apartments. Their environmental ponchos flew behind them as they ran, stopping for nothing. Hark and Fennstrum were at the front, urging the men on and with a fire-team, crushed any infected that stood in their way.​
Commander Farlorn at the back, shouting encouragement and leading the rear-guard. With the sudden flurry of activity, the infected had resumed their attack. He fired with his pistol into the shapes that were right on their tail, two dark shapes slammed over. Lieutenant Pradesh was suddenly at his side, firing randomly into the mist.​
The apartment buildings seemed a hundred kilometers away across the rain-swept concourse as they ran. Tall imposing buildings that Farlorn for some reason felt were judging him. Judging him on his command and his adherence to his duty.​
They were nearly there. So nearly there. A barrage of blaster bolts was unrelentingly pursuing them.​
Pradesh suddenly stumbled a few steps and nearly fell over. He reached one of the cars and leaned on it as if he was catching his breath. His left shoulder sagged as his carbine fell from his hands, clattering onto the ground. He began to slide down the side.​
“Come on!” Farlorn said as he blasted into the rapidly advancing horde. He grabbed Pradesh by his combat webbing and hoisted him up. The Lieutenant cried in pain as the Commander jostled him forward, shouting in his ear to keep going. He pushed Pradesh forward into the hands of corpsman Jantine who kept him moving.​
The front of the advance, at last, reached the apartment building. Hark began firing at the front windows, smashing them into shards. Fennstrum quickly followed and, with his the butt of his blaster, began breaking any shards still in the window frame with the. The last thing they needed right now was a breach in their suits.​
Loose shots were whining over their heads as they ran into the building, smacking into the facade of the building, creating black pockmarks or shattering windows. Some of the Rangers turned back and began to enact a field of fire to cover those still outside.​
Farlorn was the last one through, clambering over the edge of a staring window and falling over onto the other side, breathing heavily. He looked around. The Rangers had set up a decent defense in the lobby area of the prefab apartments. It was a drab place where the lights were out and mildew was growing in droves on the water-stained walls. A trolley lay overturned, broken baggage spilling onto the grown. The faded red carpet was soggy under his feet.​
Enemy fire was pattering off the front of the apartment. It was from a foe that could no longer see their foe and was instead firing random shots of anger at prey they could not claim. From above, there was the occasional stick-snapping sound of chosen shots from the more accurate Rangers, sure in their ability to predict the position of the foe from the sudden flashes in the mist.​
“Keep up the fire,” Farlorn said as he walked up and down the line, “Don’t let them get too close.”​
Fennstrum came onto the comms. “Commander, the first level is clear. No hostiles.”​
“Upstairs?”​
“Haven’t had a chance though Hark is covering the two staircases on the wings of the building.”​
“Why aren't they attacking? They’re insane, they should keep attacking.”​
“I don’t know Major, maybe there’s more to them than we suspected. Maybe-”​
One of the men, manning the windows, moaned loudly.​
“What’s wrong Menhil?” Pradesh said as he entered the room, his shoulder bandaged. He was holding out his side-arm while his rifle hung on its strap. “You hit?”​
“I’m fine,” He answered, “You hear that? Hear that above the wind?”​
Pradesh, Farlorn, and Fennstrum walked up to the sill beside him. For a moment, Farlorn couldn’t hear anything above the shrill wind, the snap and whine of blaster fire, and the incessant pitter-patter of the rain. Then he heard it. A great deep throaty rasp from somewhere in the roundabout. A great suction of air before a great consumptive roar.​
“Isn’t that the sound a flamer makes?” Pradesh said softly. “Isn’t it that?”​
“Who was on the list that we lost in the market? Who did we lose in the roundabout?”​
“Oh, lord. We lost Falwase when we were retreating. I saw her go down, her tanks were too heavy.”​
Fennstrum swore loudly. “Sounds like it’s getting closer. I give it a minute or two once it gets close. When that thing gets close they’ll burn us out like animals. We’ll have to retreat from this building.”​
“No, we have to take the chance. Think about it, we have to take it out now. If we don’t, we’ll have to fight it in close range, not out in the open where it’s vulnerable.”​
He peered out into the mist again. He still couldn’t see but the sound was now growing louder and louder so that everyone could hear it. It retched out as if it belonged to some great volcanic beast that often appeared in primitive stories. Some God of fire roaring in anger.​
“Which of us is the best shot?” Farlorn asked. “Hark’s good but she’s not carrying her long-range rifle today.”​
“He is,” Pradesh pointed to the man who had first heard the flamer. “Isn’t that right, Menhil?”​
“Yeah,” Menhil’s hand curled around his Vyper rifle, “I can shoot pretty good.”​
“Menhil, you’re with me. I didn’t give you that commendation for nothing. Fennstrum, keep up the sustained fire through the windows. They’ll likely be an attack that the flamer’s covering. Don’t let them get close.”​
Farlorn and Menhil moved to the back of the lobby and took a right down a corridor, passing by disserviced lifts. They found two of the pathfinder covering one of the stairways at the end of the corridor.​
“What’s up there?” Farlorn asked.​
“Just a series of living blocks. Didn’t bother to hold it. Didn’t have the numbers to but it’s clear.” The pathfinder said.​
The Commander and the Trooper ran up the stairs, three steps at once until they were on the third floor. Farlorn slowly opened the exit door and the pair found themselves in a derelict hallway with hab-units to the sides. It was nearly pitch black here but their lamps attached to the ends of their weapons shone the way.​
Farlorn kicked in through one of the doors to an apartment. He strode over to the windows, it offered a dominating view of the entire open roundabout. Using the but of his blaster pistol, he broke one of the windows. Wind and rain swept right into the room, blowing loose leaves of papers off their tables. It howled at them. It screamed at them.​
They settled in behind the window. The mist that plagued the entire city and roundabout had grown thicker, as though the discharge of their blaster was causing some chemical reaction in the air, disguising with greater effectiveness the enemy approach. Below, they saw the relentless blasts of the flamer, like the sun behind a cloud.​
“The Flamer’s a really nasty weapon,” Menhil muttered.​
“But, it is basically two cans of extremely flammable liquid.”​
“Gonna be my shot-caller?​
“We have to let it closer,” Farlorn said. “You see where it burps again like that?”​
Another flash of amber radiance backlighted the fog in the roundabout below.​
“Watch the way the glow moves. It’s moving out from the broom, maybe a bit for the fuel to ignite. The fuel tanks should just be about half a meter behind the origin point.”​
“Got it,” Mehil said as he mounted his rifle onto the sill of the window and fit it snuggly into his shoulder.​
“If you get this, I’ll be giving you the marksmen lanyard.”​
“No thanks, commander. I like my common trooper, juuuust right. Get to be right next to Pradesh.”​
“Your loss.”​
“Gladly.”​
The flamer roared again. A long curling rush of fire, like the leaf of a giant fern, emerged from the mist and barely grazed the front of the apartments. Farlorn heard Fennstrum curse loudly over the radio. “Get down! Get down!”​
“It’s widening the aperture of the flamer,” Farlorn told Menhil. “They’re putting a bit of a reach on the flamer so he can scour the bottom floors. They’re trying to range us.”​
Menhil grunted and shuffled, his eyes utterly trained through his sights.​
“You have to make this shot or we’ll be forced to retreat deeper inside. We can’t afford to fight the flamer indoors.”​
There was another popping cough and then another roar. This time, the curling arc of fire, reached up high, like the jet of a pressure hose. Farlorn grabbed Menhil and pulled him back as the fire blistered the third story windows. It spilled through the window space and shattered glass. It played across the ceiling, squirming and spasming like a shoal of yellow fish that had been brought on deck. The rain along the windowsill sizzled loudly.​
Even though their enclosed uniforms and masks, the heat was intense. The air that came through their rebreathers was hot and stuffy, making their lungs ache. Air was scarce and made them gasp as the air was being consumed by the raging fires. The flames finally sucked out, leaving the window blackened around the upper frame and most of the ceiling blackened.​
Farlorn recovered the rifle and checked it for any damage. He handed it back to Menhil as he got up, coughing loudly.​
“Come on,” Farlorn hissed hoarsely, “It’s getting closer.”​
As Menhil settled down back into position once again, Farlorn peered into the swirling mist. He narrowed his eyes, trying to pick up even the slightest movement. He considered giving ground now. The flamethrower almost had range now. One or two more ranging bursts and it would burn them out.​
“There! There!” Farlorn pointed down as the flames jetted through the raging mist and rain.​
Menhil fired the moment he swung his rifle around and saw the flames. Nothing happened.​
“No, no, no.” He muttered as he took a moment for the cooling systems to catch up. He had emptied half a clip in a single shot. He reached forward and wiped water off his sights. He loosened his nearly ironclad grip on the grip.​
“Next time, aim closer to the source. Add maybe a quarter of a meter to your shot.” Farlorn said. There would be no second chance. He was tapping his finger nervously on the sill of the window.​
“Stop that,” Menhil snapped and Farlorn obeyed.​
The flamethrower lighted up again, ripping fire through the facade of the apartments. Dribbling napalm stuck like glue onto the front, burning fiercely. Farlorn heard Fennstrum yelling through the comms, “Get back! Farlorn, we have to pull back now! Now!”​
Menhil let out the breath he had been holding and fired again.​
For a moment, nothing happened at all. Then the fuel tanks went up a terrifyingly sharp squeal that tore through the entire roundabout. A huge flower of fire ripped through the mist, rolling and coiling, white-hot and furious. Several molten pieces of broken metal soared through the air, on long streamers of flame, shrieking like parts of an exploding kettle.​
Farlorn looked back down. He saw a dozen burning figures stumble blindly around in the flames, infected caught in that terrible blast. They kept moving for a solid minute before their bones crumbled into ash and they collapsed. They sizzled loudly in the rain.​
“Good job.” Farlorn congratulated.​
“Thank you,” Mehil gasped out. His heart was racing now.​
The infected, despite the loss of their flamethrower, attacked the apartment once again. They were met by a brutal storm of blaster-bolts from the trapped platoon. Trooper Langdogen banged off multiple rockets into their ranks as they advanced from his launcher. Explosions ripped through them, tearing limb for limb and reducing many infected to nothing more than bloody chunks. Hark and came up onto the second story with five of her pathfinders and they laid down deadly accurate fire onto the heads of the infected. Against their horrific losses, they kept coming. But it was a futile deed without the support of their flamethrower and they were slowly chipped down.​
Only two of them got to the windows and crawled through them. One had its brains evacuated through the back of his head by a blaster, leaving grey goo on the ceiling, while Fennstrum impaled the chest of the second one, Jantine finishing the deed with a thrust to the nape.​
Farlorn and Menhil came down to the first floor. Troopers all around them were recovering from the second assault, checking their ammo count as others remained on station, wary of another attack.​
“That was risky,” Major Fennstrum said as Farlorn appeared.​
“It worked,” Farlorn responded as he gazed out the window and witnessed the ground before them littered with corpses. Some were still twitching but fire from the Pathfinder’s above put them down just in case. “What shape are we in, Major?”​
“Fair.”​
“No losses down here, yet?”​
“Couple of close scratches, but Jantine’s on the job.” He paused. “What now?”​
Farlorn took out his map chart of the area. “We have to drop back, now.”​
“Not hold up here?”​
“We’ve got another break at the moment and the mist isn’t helping visibility. There’s no way to know if they’ll bring more next time. We’ll drop back a few streets.”​
“I can station some of my pathfinders on the flanks as we pull back, we could find out their numbers.” Hark said, seemingly appearing out of thin air. Farlorn nearly started by three years with her and had gotten him used to that sort of thing. Still, he never did figure how she managed such things.​
“Good idea,” Farlorn said. “Now, Fennstrum, get Syna and give me a count of our current ammo levels. Pool it and distribute it evenly. After that, get the men ready to move.”​
***​

Ten minutes later, the Rangers slowly peeled away from the front of the apartment. But not without leaving several treats for any infected foes that may try to follow them. Their ammo count was starting to become dangerously low, the panicked full-auto madness of the roundabout and the infected assault on the apartments were rapidly gnawing away at their reserves. They all had four magazines left each, save for the ones already locked and loaded in their rifles. Once they were out, it was the bayonets.​
Under Farlorn’s and Hark’s instruction, the platoon pulled back, exiting through the back of the apartments and out into the terrible freezing rain. Working as spotters on the flanks, the four pathfinders pushed the count of the foe up to a hundred and forty, rapidly growing. Their small isolated and trapped platoon was now almost outnumbered four to one. Fennstrum kept his mouth shut about how bad the situation was.​
They reached a wide four-lane road and quickly crossed it as 1st squad provided overwatch. Menhil swore to Pradesh that he had seen distant shapes in the fogs. It was clear they were being shadowed now. The foe was closely watching them, searching and waiting for any moments of weakness they might exploit.​
As if to confirm Farlorn's fear, behind them, they heard a dull, reverberating crump, carried their way by the baleful wind. In the fog, they saw an obstructed fireball erupt from where the apartments had been. It had only been five minutes since they had left, how close were they?​
After the road, the platoon, almost all full sprint, quickly made their way through an industrial area. The Pathfinders at the rear were constantly revising their count of the foe. They were getting closer, that was certain.​
Factories and warehouses loomed at them from all sides. Many had been long abandoned from some economic crash that had left the business that occupied them destitute. They were slowly rotting away. Several blocks were in piles of rubble from demolition attempts or age and lack of maintenance corroding away the supporting structures. Ahead of them, gunfire cracked and echoed through the along the forlorn walkways and corridors. Any infected in the path of the platoon was being quickly and ruthlessly dispatched by Fennstrum’s advance squad. Still, it was slowing them down.​
“They’ll attack sooner or later,” said Hark as she came out of the rain. The Platoon was resting in the dry in an empty warehouse.​
“We won’t outrun them, certainly sir,” Sneered Fennstrum.​
“Then we’ll break down their numbers through a slower retreat. We’ve got a decent warren hole in this industrial area. Lot’s of hidey holes and ambush spots we can use.” He paused and turned around. “Bell! Any progress on re-connecting comms?”​
“I’m getting something. It’s extremely faint, I can barely make it out. Rains are not helping at all. I think it might be Ranger communication judging by the band and frequency it’s on.”​
“Can you estimate the distance to it from here?” Farlorn asked.​
“Maybe, sir.”​
“I don’t want any maybes, Bell. Only certainties. Get on it and tell me when you get an estimate.”​
“What’s your plan, sir?”​
“It’s still coming together, Hark. But ready me your best pathfinder.”​
“That would be me,” Smiled Hark.​
“No,” Farlorn chortled softly and shortly. “I need you here. Other than you?”​
“That would be Pathfinder Gavin.”​
“Good, now let’s get ready to cull these bastards,” Fennstrum said.​
“Major, do remember that these are citizens of our great confederacy. It is a great shame that we must put them down but it is our duty to do it. To all of you, act with compassion for these were once people and that is why we must put them out of our misery.”​
Fennstrum stalked away and switched off his comms for a moment. “Oh, Lord, you are an insufferable ass.”​
***​

The Forlorn waited for the foe to come. A period of silence hung over the entire industrial sector, as the infected closed in tighter, listening intently for any movement. The only noise was the downpour. Their entire environment is a source of noise: debris and rubble can be dislodged, kicked, disturbed, larger items of wreckage could be knocked over or bumped into. Damaged floors creaked and moaned. Old rusting doors and windows protested any attempt to move them. When a weapon is discharged, the echoes that bounce through the ruined and decrepit buildings are a great way of locating the point of origin.​
And the infected made a lot of noise as they slowly inched their way into the industrial area.​
The Carians are supremely good at this. This is their environment. This is their hunting ground. On several occasions, a Ranger would make a noise. The methods varied: a piece of rubble in a tin cup or stove to make a rattling noise, the activation of long-dead machinery, or just making piles of rubble tumble. The results were all the same, tempting random shots from the demented infected. As soon as a shot came, another Ranger would gauge the sound of the bouncing echo or the flash of light in the darkness and return fire with a lethal burst. Then, they would move to avoid the foe using the same trick on them.​
The enemy was slowly becoming wise to their tricks. After dozens of losses, the infected pulled back, revealing to Farlorn that they at least had some intelligence in their addled minds. Unable to out-stalk the Carians, they instead called out to them from the darkness. It was unnerving. The voices were distant and pleading, carried on the wind. Little sense could be understood in terms of meaning, but the tone was very clear. It was misery. It was the voices of the damned and insane. The voice of the Forlorn, Farlorn pondered ironically and grimly.​
“Ignore them,” Farlorn ordered on the wide-band. For some reason, the voices were giving him a headache. “We have to beat them in our minds first. Do not fear them.”​
But the psychological assault continued for ten more minutes. The infected were holding back. Farlorn, curious to what was going on, had Hark send three of her pathfinders forward to scout. Meanwhile, Bellary was getting closer to locating the distance of the comms. They couldn’t send anything, though, but the comms-operator had estimated that the source of the communication was five hundred meters west. It matched up with where Farlorn had set his headquarters. It confirmed their location at least, the maps of the entire slum area were even at best unreliable.​
The pathfinders returned. The foe was gathering in greater and greater numbers on the edge of the industrial area. They estimated at least eight hundred. Farlorn didn’t want to show to the men how nervous he was getting. This situation was getting worse and worse.​
“They know they can’t beat us like this,” Fennstrum explained. “So this time they’re coming in with overwhelming numbers. I don’t care how good we are, we can’t stand against those numbers. Not with a platoon. We’ve got to warn the Regiment or they could be caught off guard by such numbers.”​
“I think I’ve got a plan. Pathfinder Gavin!” Farlorn shouted.​
A tall lean figure looked up from his firing position. His cloak was drawn over his head and he had smeared dirt over it to blend it more with his surroundings. He was a pathfinder in the true mold of Pathfinder-Master Hark, dour and terse. Hark had trained most of them personally.​
“Yes, sir?” He muttered drly.​
Farlorn got beside Gavin and took out a message pad along with his ball-point pen. He used a gridded sheet to draw up a simple expression of their planned route and layout of the city's industrial area, copying from his waterproof chart. Rain tapped on the sheet.​
“I need you to take this back to the HQ,” Farlorn said as he wrote. “Five hundred meters east in that direction is where it should be. I need you to impress on Captain Killearn of our situation and position. Along with the current numbers of infected that could be a threat.”​
Farlorn finished writing and placed his signature at the bottom, authorizing it with his rank. He handed it to Gavin who put it into his satchel. “Do you understand, Pathfinder?”​
Gavin nodded.​
“Am I to go on my own, sir?”​
“I can’t afford to spare any more men. You’ll be faster than us alone and less detectable.”​
“Even so, It’ll be hard to slip past them.”​
“Don’t worry about that, pathfinder. I’ll handle that. Worry about your duty, which is to get this to Killearn. Got that.”​
The Pathfinder looked at him, thinking about his objective. He never really did like Farlorn for what he did to his world and would never forgive him for what he did, many of Rangers were the same. Farlorn was quite the man, without doubt or hesitation, to order the death of troopers to achieve his goals and ambitions. Gavin understood that. Gavin understood, despite him being a pathfinder, that he was nothing more than an instrument, and that if he fails and dies, it’ll be no more to Farlorn that a shovel breaking in a ditch or a button coming off his shirt. Farlorn had no actual concern in Gavin’s life or the manner of his ending, only that he completed what was asked of him. Farlorn was the type of person, who although he cared for his troops, saw them for what they were: currency to spend in the name of the Confederacy; and he would spend them well.​
Gavin pursed his lips and nodded. The Pathfinder got up, taking a last look at Farlorn, and then began to pick his way through the ruined factory lot behind them, keeping his head down low and his cape right around his body.​
Farlorn watched as the pathfinder disappeared out of sight.​
***​

The Rangers pulled back three more blocks. Fennstrum and the advance section came across what seemed to be an actually functioning factory. Dragging open the large front doors, they swept and cleared the inside for the rest of the platoon behind them. This had once been a speeder manufacturing plant, with machinery and assembly plants to boot. The lights here were still on, blasting the factory floor with harsh white light. It was running on emergency power​
A conveyor belt for an assembly line was still running and Fennstrum shut it down from a control pad. It was if all the workers had just left for lunch break and were just about to come back.​
“At least it's somewhere dry.” Farlorn came in. He turned back and waved in more of the troopers out of the rain. The four pathfinders and Hark stayed outside, working as spotters.​
“It’s the perfect spot. It’ll make lots of noise, sir.”​
“Good, with the pathfinders will draw as many infected they can into his factory spot. It’s open and we’ll set up a killzone.”​
“I’ll get out the lights, sir.” Fennstrum turned back to the control pad and pulled on a big red lever. With a series of loud bangs, the lights turned off, one section at a time before the whole factory was bathed in darkness. The only source of light was from the few skylights dotted on the ceiling.​
Farlorn, working with Fennstrum, worked out the positions for the men.​
“Hide!” The master of pathfinders hissed suddenly over the comms.​
At once, the Rangers melted into the shadows, dragging their cloaks over them and finding refuge in the darkest spots. Farlorn found his cover behind a batch of burst flour sacks. Fennstrum smeared dark filth over his face and backed up against a stained wall, the only thing standing out being the frightening whites of his eyes. Pradesh and a fireteam waited above on a walkway. Hark couldn’t be found anywhere.​
All of them had their silver bayonets attached to their rifles, though dulled down with soot and filth to hide their flash.​
They made no sound at, not even breathing, keeping it shallow as much as they could. They didn’t fidget or squirm. Even they’re fingers didn’t even move. Still as statues, they watched the infected begin to inch their way onto the factory floor.​
“I count at least fifty-eight.” He heard Pathfinder Gavin announce over the comms.​
“Hold your fire until I say so,” Farlorn ordered.​
They saw figures begin to walk on the wet manufacturing floor. They moved like jerking puppets, erratic and nonsensical. Their clothes were all ragged and bloody. Flies swarmed the figures as their flesh rotted. There was no mistake, they were infected. The commander of the Rangers waited until he counted fifty-three infected in the open and whispered into his mic. “Fire.”​
The Rangers rose from their stealth spots, as if they appeared out of thin air like ghosts, and opened up. It was suddenly so bright it was as if the sun had come up. The noise was immense, echoing and bouncing back in the small enclosed factory. Farlorn saw at least five of the infected drop in their brutal opening salvo. He rose up and saw one of the foe reeling after a devastating chest wound. His blaster pistol banged loudly and the infected flopped backward violently.​
“In the name of Caria, kill them!” Farlorn heard Fennstrum roar as he leaped forward. The Major speared one of the infected through the neck and fired, bursting the head like a ripe fruit. All around them, the Rangers quickly charged, pressing their advantage with furious determination.​
Above, Pradesh and his team fired down into the exposed infected, cutting down about fifteen of them and forcing the rest into cover. One of the idle generators burst into flames as the stray fire hit it. The windows above shattered, dropping heavy lead glass shards down. Three of the infected were shredded to pieces by the shards. Rain began to sweep in.​
Farlorn strode forward, shouting to his men through the roar of the intense combat and firing his heavy blaster pistol. The Rangers slaughtered more and more as they advanced. Hark’s pathfinders appeared from nowhere and cut more of them down, forcing the infected into a corner of the factory that once had been an assembly line.​
They took their first loss here, one Trooper Soylon. An infected jumped at him from around a corner with a slugger scattergun, releasing a wide burst of incandescent fury. Soylon fell over with a loud scream that even drowned out the roar of blaster fire. Jantine, who had been right behind the fallen trooper, yelled in fury as he riddled the front of the offending infected with blaster bolts. He dove down to Soylon, the rest of the Rangers advancing without him, but he saw that it was clearly a mortal wound. The front of his eyes had been lost, his jaw shattered, and his face was masked with blood.​
He held down the screaming and sobbing mess that was once Soylon. His blood was spilling all over Jantine’s uniform as he tried to hold him down. There was no use wasting medical supplies on someone this far gone.​
But he could help. He could comfort him. It was the least that the corpsman could do It was his oath. His duty.. He struggled to remember his training and the rites.​
“Be calm now, my good friend, for The Lord is rushing here to present you with the gift of peace you crave. Is there anything you wish to confess now?” Jantine tried to do his best soothing voice. He couldn’t tell if it was working on Soylon but he had stopped screaming. He didn’t reply.​
“I have heard and now forgive you for any sins you may have committed. Know that The Lord hath blessed you and, though there is pain, it will end, as all pain ends, and you will ascend without the pain of the mortal world to his holy domain. These last rites I give you freely and in good faith.”​
Soylon was struggling to say something. What used to be his mouth was making wet gurgling noises. Jantine leaned over and placed his hood’s audio receptors over his face.​
“After I’m gone… they’ll die,” Soylon pleaded. “R-r-r-remember them or they’re gone forever. S-s-s-she’ll be so l-l-l-lonely...” His left hand clawed at the vest pocket of his tunic, trying to unbutton it.​
Soylon’s bloody left hand still fumbled with the pocket fastening. Jantine reached over and undid the pocket for him, and took out what was inside. It was an old faded black-and-white picture of Soylon with a woman by his side, cradling a small child in her hands. It had been his beloved daughter and her grandson lost forever during the Fall. He had talked so much about them during the mobilization.​
“I shall, I promise you that. Be now with them, Soylon, be happy with them.” Jantine whispered and looked back down. Soylon was gone.​
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