Chapter 853: Missing Primary Target 1
Chapter 853: Missing Primary Target 1
The corporal three bunks down made it to his feet. The figure was already past him—blade trailing shadows. He looked down at the horizontal line appearing across his midsection, red spreading like ink in water, intestines sliding out through the gap in wet coils that steamed unnaturally, coiling around his feet like living serpents before going still.
The staff sergeant woke combat-ready. Hit the floor in a crouch, rifle up—
A blade descended—glowing with hellish fire. He blocked with his rifle. Steel met steel. The impact drove him to his knees—shockwave cracking the bunk frame behind him.
The figure pressed down—unnatural strength pouring through, runes on her gloves flaring bright red.
The rifle barrel snapped like dry bone.
The blade continued through, split him crown to crotch in a single, cruel stroke. Two halves fell in opposite directions—organs spilling in a steaming pile, blood pooling so thick it bubbled like tar from the underworld.
Eleven seconds. Fourteen bodies—gore painting the barracks in abstract hellscapes, limbs scattered like offerings to dark gods.
The last soldier made it to the door—
The blade punched through his back, through his chest, through the door—pinning him to the wood in a spray of splinters and blood that ignited briefly with ethereal flame before guttering out.
****
The vehicle bay held six soldiers sprinting for transports.
A figure dropped from the rafters—forty feet straight down onto the lead corporal. His skull cratered the concrete with a wet explosion—brain matter spraying across oil-stained floor in gray-pink chunks that smoked faintly with unnatural heat.
The private behind him was three steps from safety. A blade caught him across the belly—gutting him like a sacrifice, intestines erupting across the transport’s hood in looping, steaming ropes that writhed for seconds as if trying to crawl back inside.
The specialist reached the door handle—
A blade burst through from inside. Through metal. Through her chest. Through her back. A second figure had been waiting—shadows clinging to her form like loyal demons. The blade twisted—cruel, deliberate—ripping upward, splitting her sternum with a crack like thunder, blood fountaining in a red geyser that painted the ceiling.
Three soldiers opened fire. Muzzle flash strobing. Brass ringing. Bullets hitting nothing because targets were never where bullets arrived—figures blurring into shadows, reappearing like wraiths from nightmares.
A blade took the first shooter’s hand—severing at the wrist, stump cauterizing with hellish heat. Then his head—rolling across the floor, eyes still wide in shock.
A blade punched through the second’s spine—erupting from his chest in a spray of bone and gore, twisting to shred his heart before withdrawing with a suck of wet flesh.
His head bounced off the transport’s windshield—cracking glass, leaving a smear of blood and brain.
The last soldier threw down his rifle. Fell to his knees. Nineteen years old. Three months from home.
"Please—"
The blade moved—descending like divine judgment, splitting him from crown to groin in a spray of blood and viscera that steamed with unholy vapor.
The communications hub held four technicians.
The first reached the emergency console, fingers flying across keys—
A hand grabbed her head and drove her face into the screen. Once. Twice. Three times.
Console shattered—glass exploding inward, embedding in her eyes, her cheeks, her forehead. Skull shattered with it—bone cracking like porcelain, brain matter mixing with circuitry in a sparking, bloody slurry.
She slumped, twitching, face unrecognizable as human.
The second made it five steps toward the door. Something punched through his spine—not a bullet, a fist wrapped in shadow and hellfire. Bone shattered like glass under a hammer. A boot descended on his back—armored heel driving downward with unnatural force—and his spine exploded inward, vertebrae pulverizing into dust, ribs folding like wet cardboard.
He screamed once—high, wet—before the blade followed, descending in a silver-black arc that split him from neck to groin in one merciless stroke. Intestines spilled in steaming ropes, coiling on the concrete like dying serpents.
His body twitched once, twice, then stilled—blood pooling so thick it reflected the red emergency lights like a dark mirror.
The third emptied fifteen rounds at a blur crossing the room. Fifteen bullets tore through empty air—tracers streaking uselessly, embedding in walls with dull thuds. The blur resolved into a figure inches from her face—black armor drinking light, mask reflecting her terrified eyes like a void staring back.
She had time to register the faint crimson glow behind the mask’s slits.
Then the blade opened her throat.
A single horizontal slash—edge so sharp it parted flesh and cartilage without resistance. Blood sprayed in a perfect arc, painting the ceiling in crimson droplets that hissed as they hit the hot metal of the console.
Her head lolled back—neck gaping like a second mouth—before she crumpled, hands clawing uselessly at the wound as life bubbled out in frothy red gouts.
The fourth didn’t run.
Tears streamed down his face. He watched colleagues die—watched limbs separate, torsos open, heads roll—and something inside him broke.
"Please," he whispered, voice cracking. "I have a daughter. She’s seven. Please—"
The figure tilted its head—slow, deliberate, almost curious.
The blade moved.
No flourish. No cruelty for cruelty’s sake. Just efficiency.
It punched through his sternum—clean, precise—then twisted once. His heart burst in his chest. Blood fountained from his mouth in a choking spray. He dropped to his knees, hands clutching the hilt buried in his ribcage, eyes wide with the realization that mercy wasn’t coming.
The blade withdrew with a wet suck.
He fell forward—face-first into his own pooling blood.
The mess hall held eight soldiers playing cards.
"Liar!" Sneered the figure.
***
The door detonated inward—reinforced steel folding like paper under an unseen force. A splinter the size of a finger caught the nearest soldier through the eye, punched through his skull, scrambled his brain into gray-pink slurry.
Dead before he hit the floor—body sliding across linoleum, leaving a red smear.
The sergeant flipped the table for cover, rifle coming up—
A blade punched through tabletop, through rifle, through chest—steel glowing faintly red as it emerged from his back. He looked down at the point protruding from his sternum, blood bubbling around the wound.
"That’s... not fair..."
The blade ripped sideways—tearing him open from sternum to hip in a spray of gore. Organs spilled across the table—heart still beating twice before going still—steam rising from the hot viscera in the cold air.
A figure flowed through the remaining six—shadows clinging to her like loyal demons. Blade across one throat—blood jetting in a high arc.
Thrust through another’s chest—ribs cracking like dry twigs, blade erupting from his back in a fountain of red. Horizontal slash opening two at once—bellies parting, intestines tumbling out in wet loops that steamed and twitched.
Three seconds. Eight corpses.
Cards scattered across the floor, soaking up blood—aces and kings floating in crimson pools like drowned royalty.
The Seven Emissaries gathered in the command center.
Fifty corpses. Four minutes.
Bodies everywhere—limbs scattered, torsos split, heads rolling, blood painting walls and ceilings in abstract hellscapes. The air stank of copper, shit, and something darker—something like brimstone and ozone mixed together.
The leader stepped forward. Removed her mask.
Sharp features. Cold eyes. Dark hair pulled tight. Beautiful the way a blade was beautiful—mid-twenties in appearance, though something in those eyes suggested age far beyond years, far beyond mortality.
"Report."
One removed his mask—male, Asian, scarred from temple to jaw in a jagged line that looked burned rather than cut.
"Fifty confirmed. No survivors. No transmissions."
"The target?"
"Not here. Intelligence compromised. Secondary facility. Primary subjects evacuated before we arrived."
Silence stretched—thick, heavy, broken only by the drip of blood from somewhere overhead.
Her blade cleared its sheath faster than sight—one moment on her back, next moment buried three feet deep in the nearest console. Sparks showered. Screens died in cascades of shattered glass and dying pixels.
"Someone warned them."
"They knew we were coming."
"Obviously." She ripped the blade free—steel singing as it left metal. "Fifty soldiers left behind as sacrifice. A delaying action."
"A message?"
"A challenge." Her eyes swept the carnage—bodies still twitching with residual dark energy, shadows seeming to deepen around them as if feeding on the slaughter. "They want us to know they can predict where we strike."
"Should we pursue?"
"No. The primary targets will surface. They always do."
"The compound?"
"Burn it. Leave nothing but ashes and questions."
She pulled her mask back on. Turned toward the exit.
"Paris remains the focus. The timeline remains intact. Tonight was a setback. Nothing more."
The Emissaries followed—seven shadows flowing through a compound of corpses, armor dripping blood that hissed faintly on contact with the floor.
Outside, the mountain air was cold. Stars wheeled overhead, indifferent to slaughter.
Behind them, flames began to rise—unnatural fire, black at the core, spreading with demonic hunger, consuming concrete, steel, flesh, secrets.
The leader stopped at the tree line.
Reached into her vest.
Pulled out a phone—sleek, black, technology that didn’t exist in any consumer market, screen glowing with faint crimson runes.
She dialed a number from memory.
One ring.
Two.
The line connected.
"Senithe," the leader said. "It’s done. But we have a problem."
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