anwhile....
In the crumbling skeleton of what had once been a downtown comrcial district, a different kind of operation unfolded beneath the pallid sky. The buildings here leaned toward one another like exhausted conspirators, their windows shattered, their facades scarred by years of neglect and violence. But within one such structure—a forr bank, its marble lobby now serving as a makeshift command post—activity humd with desperate purpose.
A man stood at the center of it all. His posture was rigid, almost military, despite the frayed edges of his coat and the deep shadows carved beneath his eyes. Black hair, streaked with grey at the temples, was pulled back severely from his face and bound at the nape of his neck. He moved with the economy of soone who had long ago learned that wasted motion ant wasted ti—and wasted ti ant death.
"Hurry it up," he barked, his voice carrying across the chaotic lobby without rising above a sharp, commanding tone. Workers scrambled at his words, hauling crates, checking inventory lists, loading supplies onto battered carts. "I don't care if the straps break—use more straps. That shipnt needs to reach Crimson territory by nightfall, and I will not be the reason it's late."
A young runner skidded to a halt before him, breathless and pale. "Sir, we have a problem. The stores are... they're lower than we estimated. We don't have enough to fill the full order. There's a shortfall—maybe twenty percent."
The man's jaw tightened. For a mont, the mask of command slipped, revealing sothing rawer beneath—fear, perhaps, or the particular exhaustion of soone who had spent too long dancing on the edge of a blade.
"Then we find more," he said quietly, each word clipped and precise. "Scavenge. Requisition from the reserves. I don't care if you have to pull it from the mouths of your own people. That shipnt goes out complete, or we all know what happens next."
The runner swallowed hard and nodded, already turning to relay the orders.
The man watched him go, his expression unchanged. But his thoughts were darker, heavier. Crimson doesn't accept excuses. Crimson doesn't accept shortages. Crimson accepts results, and failure ans—
The first explosion ripped through the front of the building.
Glass shattered inward in a crystalline storm. Smoke and dust billowed through the lobby, choking the light, turning order into chaos. The man threw himself behind a overturned table, his hand already reaching for the weapon at his hip.
"Mutant breach?" he shouted over the screams and the ringing in his ears. "Report! Is there a mutant breach?"
A lookout stumbled toward him, face streaked with soot and blood from a superficial cut. "No, sir! We had patrols out—full sweep less than an hour ago! Nothing within half a klick, I swear it!"
Before the man could respond, a second explosion tore through the rear of the building. The floor shuddered beneath them. Ceiling tiles rained down. Sowhere in the back, soone scread—a sound that cut off abruptly.
The man's communicator crackled to life, a voice raw with panic spilling through the static.
"Sir! We're under attack! Repeat, we are UNDER ATTACK! Multiple hostiles, unknown affiliation, they ca out of nowhere and—"
The transmission dissolved into static.
Then silence.
The man straightened slowly, his eyes scanning the smoke-filled lobby, the fallen workers, the crates of supplies scattered and broken. His hand tightened on his weapon.
"Who the hell attacks us here?" he growled, more to himself than anyone else. His voice hardened, the fear beneath it buried under layers of command and pride. "In our own territory? Bold. Stupid, but bold."
He reached the threshold and stopped, surveying the destruction. Fires flickered in scattered patches where the explosions had ignited sothing flammable. Shadows danced across the ruined street.
"Fan out," he ordered, gesturing sharply. "Find these bastards. I want them alive. I want to know who sent them, why they think they can touch us, and then I want them to regret it."
His n moved with practiced efficiency, spreading into the darkness. One of them—a thin man with a cybernetic eye that glowed faintly in the low light—raised a hand, his scanning implant whirring as it processed the environnt.
"Sir. I've got sothing." He paused, tilting his head. "Five signatures. Moving together. Heading northwest toward the old tram station."
"Five?" Another man laughed, the sound harsh and dismissive. "Five people think they can hit us? In our own damn building? They got a death wish or what?"
The leader's eyes narrowed. Five attackers. Either suicidally confident or backed by sothing they hadn't revealed yet. Either way, he intended to find out.
"Bring them to ," he said flatly. "I want to hear their reasons before I put bullets in their skulls."
His n acknowledged the order and began to move—
A shadow fell between them.
One mont, the street ahead was empty, lit only by flickering flas. The next, a figure stood there as if he had always been standing there, as if the darkness itself had simply decided to take human form.
The man landed silently from a leap none of them had seen coming, his boots touching down on cracked asphalt without a sound. He straightened slowly, and the firelight caught his features.
Black hair, long and wild, It moved in a wind that touched no one else, framing a face of sharp, angular beauty that belonged on a statue or a grave monunt. His eyes were dark blue, so deep they appeared black in the dim light, and they swept across the assembled n with an expression that held no fear, no uncertainty, no humanity at all.
Just cold, patient assessnt.
For a heartbeat, no one moved.
Then his gaze settled on the leader. His voice, when it ca, was quiet—almost conversational—but it carried in the silence like a blade drawn across stone.
"Who's in charge here?"
The leader didn't hesitate. His arm shot forward, finger stabbing toward the dark-haired stranger like a blade.
"Kill him."
His n moved as one.
The first—a wiry woman with crackling energy arcing between her palms—launched a bolt of raw electricity toward Julian's chest. The second, a hulking brute with stone-like skin, charged forward with earth-shaking strides, his massive fist already cocked back. Two more flanked from either side, weapons materializing from folds of light-distorted air—skill-users, every one of them.
Julian didn't move.
The lightning bolt struck a wall of absolute darkness that simply appeared between him and its caster. The energy splashed against it like water against rock, dissipating into harmless sparks. The brute's fist slamd into the sa shadow barrier a heartbeat later—and stopped dead, as though he'd punched a mountain. The cracks that spiderwebbed across his stony knuckles suggested the mountain had punched back.
"My... my attack just stopped?" The woman stared at her hands, disbelief warring with dawning horror.
The brute stumbled backward, cradling his fractured fist. "What the hell is that?!"
The two flankers hesitated mid-lunge, suddenly far less eager to close the distance.
Julian tilted his head slightly, that dark blue gaze sweeping across them with what might have been disappointnt. "No interest in talking, then. Pity."
He raised one hand.
The shadows at his feet surged.
They didn't rise like mist or creep like living darkness. They exploded upward—dozens of spear-like projections, each one sharp enough to pierce steel, each one aid with surgical precision at the attackers surrounding him. The air whistled with their passage.
But these weren't ordinary fighters.
The electricity-wielder threw herself sideways, rolling through broken glass and coming up with her hands already sparking again. The stone-skinned brute ducked behind an overturned vehicle, shadowspears punching through its fra inches from his skull. The two flankers twisted and dodged with the fluid grace of trained combatants, one sorsaulting over a spear, the other sliding beneath another on his knees.
They regrouped several ters back, breathing hard, eyes wide.
"What the hell was that?" one of them gasped.
"No idea," another replied. "But he's not just so random attacker. This guy's... different."
The leader stood frozen at the threshold of his ruined building, watching his elite fighters scatter like leaves before a storm. His hand tightened on his weapon.
Five signatures, they said. Just five.
If this one was anything to go by, five was already too many.
The whisper of steel leaving its sheath was soft, almost intimate—a sound that carried through the smoke-heavy air like a promise.
Julian held his katana low, the blade catching faint light from the scattered fires. Lightning began to crawl along its edge, slow at first, then faster, dancing across the tempered steel in blue-white arcs that illuminated his expressionless face from below.
"No words," he said quietly. "Then I'll cut through."
He moved.
Not fast—instant. One heartbeat he was standing in his ring of dispersing shadows; the next, he was among them, lightning-lit steel already tracing a lethal arc toward the nearest fighter's throat. The electricity scread as it displaced air, leaving afterimages burned into retinas.
"WATCH OUT!" The leader's voice cracked through the chaos.
He was already moving.
Sothing flowed through him—not speed, exactly, not strength, but sothing between. His body twisted into the path of Julian's blade with unnatural grace, and when steel t... sothing... it didn't clash. It slid.
Julian's eyes narrowed. His strike, aid with lethal precision, suddenly felt wrong—as though the force behind it had been rerouted, redirected, sent spiraling harmlessly past its target instead of through it. The leader's hand, open and almost gentle, guided the katana's edge away from flesh with a motion that looked more like water than combat.
"Flow," the leader breathed, sweat beading on his forehead despite the apparent ease of his deflection. "You're fast, stranger. But speed ans nothing if you can't connect."
Julian recovered instantly, katana reversing for a backhanded slash. Again, the leader's body flowed around the strike—not dodging, not blocking, but deflecting, turning lethal montum into empty air with movents that seed to anticipate Julian's intent before the blade ever moved.
Their eyes t over crossed steel.
Julian's dark blue gaze held sothing new—not frustration, not fear. Interest. Cold, analytical interest.
"Flow," he repeated quietly. "Interesting."
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