Chapter 338: Day 2 in hell
Lucas Grey crouched behind a rocky outcropping, binoculars trained on the mining facility below as the morning sun painted the industrial complex in harsh, utilitarian shadows. The surveillance data from the previous twelve hours sat heavy in his mind like pieces of a puzzle that refused to form a coherent picture.
“Sir,” Elena Vasquez whispered, sliding up beside him with the fluid grace of soone who’d learned to move quietly in hostile territory. “Torres picked up sothing on the passive scanners. You’re going to want to see this.”
Lucas lowered his binoculars and followed Vasquez back to their makeshift observation post, where his squad had established a defensive periter among the rocky terrain. Twenty soldiers, all Vanguard Initiative recruits, all looking to him for answers he didn’t have yet. Torres was hunched over a collection of electronic equipnt that looked like it had been cobbled together from spare parts and determination.
“What do you have for , Torres?” Lucas asked, settling into a crouch beside the communications specialist.
Torres held up a small device, roughly the size of a cigarette pack, its surface etched with circuitry patterns that definitely weren’t standard EDF issue. “Found this wedged behind so rocks about fifty ters from our position. Passive scanner picked up its electromagnetic signature when I was doing routine sweeps.”
Lucas examined the device, turning it over in his hands. The construction was sophisticated—military grade, but not from any manufacturer he recognized. More concerning was its placent: positioned with clear line of sight to their observation post and the mining facility below.
“It’s a signal booster,” Torres continued, his voice carrying the kind of quiet excitent that ca with solving a technical puzzle. “But not for communication enhancent. This thing’s been actively jamming our attempts to establish contact with Command.”
The implications hit Lucas like a physical weight. Soone had been monitoring their position, knew their communication protocols, and had been systematically sabotaging their mission from the mont they’d arrived.
“Rodriguez,” Lucas called softly, and the demolitions expert materialized beside him with the kind of silent efficiency that made her dangerous in close quarters. “I want you to trace the optimal placent vectors for this device. Where would soone need to position themselves to plant it without being seen from our surveillance points?”
Rodriguez studied the terrain through her scope, calculating angles and sight lines with the thodical precision of soone whose job was understanding how things broke and exploded.
“Based on our patrol patterns and observation schedules,” she said after a mont, “soone would have needed detailed knowledge of our tactical positioning. This wasn’t random placent. Whoever did this knew exactly where we’d set up our primary observation post.”
“Which ans,” Vasquez added, her voice tight with the realization, “soone’s been watching us since we arrived.”
Lucas felt his jaw clench. In his experience, when unknown parties started playing gas with communication systems and surveillance, people usually ended up dead. The question was whether his team would be the hunters or the hunted.
“Pack it up,” he ordered, his voice carrying the kind of calm authority that made subordinates move without question. “We’re going to have a conversation with our friends at the mining facility.”
Behind him, twenty soldiers began breaking down their observation post with practiced efficiency, each movent coordinated and purposeful. These weren’t elites like him, but they were professional, and they trusted his judgnt absolutely.
—
The approach to the mining complex felt wrong from the mont they left their observation post. Lucas moved point, his senses extended and hyperaware, while his squad maintained formation behind him—twenty soldiers spread in tactical spacing that provided mutual support and overlapping fields of fire.
The facility’s main entrance was a cluster of prefabricated buildings arranged around a central courtyard, where approximately thirty people were going about their morning routines with the kind of organized efficiency that had been bothering Lucas since yesterday.
Too organized. Too calm. Too fucking convenient.
“Squads Two and Three, establish periter containnt,” Lucas ordered quietly into his comm. “Squad One, overwatch positions. Nobody moves without clearance.”
His soldiers flowed into position like water, professional and silent. Lucas felt a familiar surge of pride watching them work—these recruits had learned fast, adapted to field conditions, followed orders without hesitation. They looked at him with the kind of respect reserved for soone who’d earned it through competence and leadership.
“Excuse ,” Lucas called out, approaching a group of workers who were discussing supply distribution schedules with clipboards and the kind of detailed planning that suggested long-term coordination rather than ergency adaptation.
A middle-aged woman with dirt-stained coveralls and tired eyes looked up from her clipboard. “Yes? Can we help you?”
“I’m hoping you can,” Lucas replied, his tone professionally neutral while his eyes catalogued exit routes and potential threats. “We’ve been having so communication difficulties, and I’m wondering if anyone here might have information about signal interference in this area.”
The woman’s expression shifted almost imperceptibly—a micro-expression that lasted maybe half a second, but Lucas had been trained to notice when people were calculating responses rather than reacting naturally.
“Signal interference?” she asked, her voice carrying just the right note of confused concern. “I’m not sure what you an. We haven’t noticed any problems with our communication systems.”
Lucas held up the jamming device. “This was found positioned with clear line of sight to our observation post. Military-grade signal disruption equipnt, placed with precision that suggests detailed knowledge of our tactical positioning.”
The woman stared at the device for perhaps two seconds too long—long enough for Lucas to see recognition flicker across her features before she composed herself.
“I’ve never seen anything like that before,” she said, but her body language was already shifting into defensive postures that suggested preparation for confrontation rather than confusion about unknown technology.
“I see.” Lucas let silence stretch between them, an interrogation technique that usually made people uncomfortable enough to reveal more than they intended. “Would you mind if we searched the facility? Standard security sweep, just to make sure there aren’t any other devices that might be causing problems.”
“Of course,” the woman replied, but her eyes were already moving to other workers in the courtyard, and Lucas caught the subtle hand signals that definitely weren’t standard civilian communication.
Military signals. Combat coordination.
‘Preparation for engagent,’ he thought.
“All squads, weapons ready,” Lucas said quietly into his comm, never taking his eyes off the woman. “We have potential hostiles preparing for engagent.”
Around the courtyard, he could see his soldiers shifting position slightly, hands moving to weapon grips, eyes tracking potential threats with the kind of heightened awareness that ca from trusting their squad leader’s instincts.
“Ma’am,” Lucas said, his voice still professionally polite but carrying an edge that suggested the conversation was about to change tone, “I’m going to need you to explain why your people are moving into combat positions.”
The woman’s facade cracked slightly. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“The hand signals you used thirty seconds ago. The way your people are establishing overlapping fields of fire. The fact that six of them just moved to positions that would allow them to flank my squads if this conversation goes sideways.” Lucas stepped closer, close enough that she’d have to look up to maintain eye contact. “I’ve been doing this for a long ti. I know what tactical preparation looks like.”
For a mont, the woman maintained her performance. Then sothing shifted in her expression—not fear, not anger, but the kind of cold calculation that belonged to soone making strategic decisions under pressure.
“You’re very observant,” she said, and her voice had changed completely. Gone was the tired refugee persona, replaced by the clipped professional tone of soone accustod to giving orders under fire.
“Military training?” Lucas asked.
“Among other things.” The woman raised her hand, and Lucas saw the other civilians—thirty people who’d been pretending to be refugees—suddenly produce weapons that definitely weren’t improvised mining tools.
Standard EDF Ravager rifles. Military-grade body armor that had been concealed under civilian clothing. Combat gear that spoke to professional training and recent battlefield experience.
“Where did you get EDF equipnt?” Lucas demanded, but even as he asked the question, his tactical mind was already processing the implications.
“Sa place we got our orders,” the woman replied, and thirty Ravager rifles swung toward Lucas and his squads with the kind of coordinated precision that spoke to extensive training and battlefield experience.
But Lucas Grey hadn’t survived three years of academy life while being the top student and impromptu Harbinger encounters in space on his first two deploynts by being slow to adapt.
Lightning coursed through his nervous system like liquid electricity, and the world slowed to the kind of crystalline clarity that ca with S-class awakened abilities. He could see the micro-expressions on hostile faces, track the movent of trigger fingers, calculate trajectories and impact vectors with superhuman precision.
He moved.
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