After we decompressed a little from our success, we made our way back towards the transports. It was crazy, we only had to clear a few hundred feet to make it to where the assimilated soldiers were while they were shooting at us, but it had seemed like huge chasm at the time, and with the amount of casualties we suffered, it probably seemed even larger to the regular soldiers who didnât have enhanced speed.
It looked like weâd lost almost 20 of our own soldiers, mostly vyrane, but a few of our team members as well.
Before we even made it all the way back over, Seash was rushing towards us beside Kotlokk, with Almana hot on their tails.
âWhat the fuck did you do?â Seash demanded.
I rolled my eyes, âYouâre welcome, bitch.â
Seash slashed a hand through the air, âYou think this is a game? You disobeyed my direct orders and put the entire mission in jeopardy! Plus, you destroyed our largest repulser barrier, greatly diminishing our defensive capabilities.â
Eve held her chin up high, showing herself proud and superior, âWeâre fighting an enemy that doesnât eat, doesnât sleep, and doesnât stop until theyâve destroyed everything in their path; if I hadnât intervened, we wouldâve eventually died after they wore out
all
our barriers.â
Seash grumbled and growled, but he didnât have a good rebuttal for Eveâs claim, so he just stalked off to check on the situation.
Almana gestured to the now broken repulser shield, âSeriously though, what did you do? It was exactly what we needed to interrupt the enemyâs assault and turn things around for us.â
Eve waved it off, âI just reversed the polarity of the repulser field and maximized its output.â She shrugged, âPart of my specialty, I can turn pretty much anything into a weapon, even a shield or barrier.â She said breezily.
Kotlokk tilted his head to the side, âStill, while youâre absolutely right we wouldnât have survived if we didnât turn things around, Seash is correct the mission canât succeed without you so you shouldnât put yourself at risk; you should learn to delegate better, Eve.â He insisted.
Once upon a time Iâd considered Kotlokk a friend, and even though that ship has long since sailed, I was glad he wasnât hassling us.
Eve rolled her eyes, âWhatever.â
Kotlokk just chuckled, clicking his insectoid mandibles, then continued on after Seash.
Almana stayed with us, still looking starstruck over the whole thing, âAnd the way you guys moved, I couldnât believe it; I had no idea you had traditional sword training, and you were all so fast it was hard to keep upâI didnât even know regular people could move like that.â
I shrugged, wanting to move past the subject as quickly as I could, âWeâve had some minor genetic modifications to enhance our reflexes, makes us move faster and much more precisely.â
âSounds like a modification I should look into for myself.â Almana added.
I waved it off, âYeah itâs super badass, but the problem is people start treating you like a hero, following you around and asking you to save the day. Gets rather tiresome being so awesome.â
Almana rolled her eyes, âMy, what a burden.â
I nodded, âYeah, itâs a tough life.â
Almana giggled, patted me on the arm, then continued on after the other commanders.
Eve leaned her head against my arm as I let out a weary sigh, glad we didnât suffer the third degree like I was dreading.
âHow are you holding up, sweet-thing? Does being active and fighting or using powers or whatever drain more of your remaining void energy?â I asked.
Eve sighed too, âImagine an engine that has enough fuel to last a thousand years, but when you activate it, you burn away a few extra seconds.â
âThat doesnât seem like much at all with that comparison.â
Eve nodded, âExactly, this kind of activity is nothing to me.â
I had to think about that one for a few moments, and then another creeping doubt entered my mind, âWhat about when itâs a lot more activity, like what would be required to fight another Predazoan?â
âThat would certainly burn a lot more.â
âEnough to be concerned?â I asked.
Eve looked up into my eyes, âMaybe, but the rewards afterwards will be well worth it.â
âMeaning?â
Eve stepped in front of me so she could fully look at me then, âIf I consume another Predazoan, not only will I assimilate their biomass core into myself, but Iâll absorb their void energy as well.â
My eyebrows shot up, âSo you can refuel your void energy reserves by consuming another Predazoan?â
Eve nodded once, âPrecisely.â
Well, not like that changed anything for us, we were on the way to kill Beta-09 all the same. Still, if it helped alleviate Eveâs suffering, I was all the gladder for it. Seemed like we had another reason to kill the next Predazoan, and depending how long we remained contained, it might turn into a new trend for us.
***
There was no time to celebrate our victory, we had to move with a purpose and get out of this tunnel yesterday. We still had over a dozen miles to go, and we had to go completely on foot now.
We did a head count and discovered we lost 18 soldiers in the skirmish; most of them had been vyrane, but we lost a few marines too, and one of our power armor soldiers had to abandon his power armor as it was too badly damaged during the skirmish.
We stripped the buses of all the gear we could carry, but it was time to start traveling light, so we left everything behind but the main essentials.
After a very,
very
brief ceremony where we honored the dead and set fire to their bodies so they wouldnât come back assimilated, we formed up in one long line marching in pairs, with some mobile turrets out at the front and back of the line.
It was still dark in the tunnel with all the lights disabled, so everyone activated their mounted lights, although that wasnât nearly enough for us to see well in the massive tunnel, so they deployed some strange emergency beacon lights that floated around us like strange glowing balloons, plus the lights from the mobile turrets.
Even with everything we had activated, it was still so dark everywhere you looked. Sure, you could see 50 feet in front of youâmaybe a hundred feet. But beyond that it was pitch black, and the tunnel went on for miles.
Seash planted Eve and me right in the middle of the line, with the power armor soldiers around us, ready to shield and protect usâfelt like babysitting honestly. The researchers stayed with us too, holding their guns like they barely knew what to do with them, even with all the days of practice shooting from the safety of the buses. Kianna looked pitiful, scared and injured, looking like she wanted to hold Eveâs or my hand for comfort. I really donât think I ever saw her this scared, even when dealing with Gamma-12, and I started to suspect she was afraid of the dark more than anything.
A little behind the researchers was Lobae and Vinnago who we hadnât talked to in daysâhadnât seen much of either since they were on the other bus when we traveled. They offered us brief hellos, but it was clear we all knew whatever bond we once shared had been completely severed, and now it was just up to the agents to protect the assetsâfollow their precious Empireâs orders, same as always.
It was better this way, rather than even try to pretend, a clean break was best.
Seash seemed to cool down but still he ordered us to stay out of the fighting, to only act defensively should we encounter another enemy force. As always, he was worried about keeping the Predazoans secret, so after it was clear our secret was safe, he seemed to let it all go and focus his efforts on getting us all out of the tunnel.
Of course, while our secret was obviously safe, our actions clearly sparked Almanaâs curiosity and interest to the point she started bombarding us with questions about our training and abilities, wanting to know how often we fought on the front lines despite our specialty of being heavy weapons experts that would usually end the conflicts without getting directly involved.
Before, Iâd been concerned Almana would question why we might avoid combat or stay well and clear of any danger, thinking it strange soldiers would be so averse to fighting. Instead, we broke protocol and ended up fighting, and now we wouldnât hear the end of it.
Most of the resistance soldiers seemed rather starstruck around our team, seeing our advanced tactics and weaponry almost like some celebrity status, but weâd thankfully avoided getting tangled all up in that messâuntil now with Almana. We traded one annoyance for the other, and honestly I wasnât sure which would be better, looking like cowards who avoided fighting despite being in some elite military squad, or now looking like heroes despite supposedly working on the back lines.
Of course, Almana couldnât gush for long considering what all we were still dealing with, and her attention was pulled away frequently by other members of the team while we traveled through the dark.
Progress was slow and careful, and occasionally, a small team of assimilated soldiers would pop out of the dark and attack us. We had to respond quickly and furiously, focusing on destabilizing the dead puppets as quickly as possible. We threw down our barriers and shielding, but sometimes it wasnât enough, and we ended up losing a few more people in the dark, including one of our clandestine agents.
Our sensors were completely useless now, unable to detect the enemies in the tunnel. Eve said it was because the puppets had shifted their biology to resemble cold corpses, with no heat or heartbeat for anyone to detect. Even their movements were impossible to pick up until they started attacking us, working as shadows in the dark.
No one could figure out how exactly these assimilated soldiers were so stealthy compared to all the others weâd fought on the way here, but I wasnât about to question what all the Outsider magic could accomplish; at this point there was very little left that could surprise meâI mean I would be surprised when something new and crazy happened that I could never even imagine, but I wouldnât be surprised the Predazoans were able to surprise me.
Eve seemed to be doing a little better now while we were traveling on foot, which made me wonder if hibernating too much had been bad for her, or if a little bit of action helped revitalize herâor if she was just really good at masking her pain now that we had to keep moving. I kept her close and watched her like a hawk for any signs of fatigue, but that only seemed to irritate her as she assured me she would have more than enough energy to destroy a dozen solar systems, let alone walk down a dark tunnel.
I hated this new distance with Eve and the fact she was clearly hiding something from meâhiding her pain and how she planned to deal with it. It felt like we were more at odds than ever before, and yet we still yearned for each other so desperately, more than anything just wanting to be free to be with each otherâto touch and feel every inch of bare flesh without the inhibitor field between us. We were both beyond frustrated, but so far there was no end in sight, so weâd just have to continue to suffer together.
We traveled on foot in the dark tunnel for a couple hours, having fought a dozen little ambushes and losing just under two dozen of our soldiers when we finally made it to the tunnelâs exit ramp, with just a tiny scattered sunbeam illuminating our way out.
âSomethingâs wrong.â Eve said suddenly, standing up stiff like a wolf on high alert.
âWhat is it?â Almana asked, always ready to listen to Eveâs instincts or advice now after she proved herself right every time.
Eve pointed towards the sunlight ahead of us, âThatâs not enough sun shining through for how open the exit ramps are.â
Looking off in the distance, we were still quite a ways away from the exit, but I could definitely see what Eve was talking about; it was just a few scattered beams of sunlight, peaking through, nowhere near enough for the large hole that allowed several vehicles to pass through at once.
Something was blocking our way out.
âShit.â Almana muttered, then rushed off to the front of the line towards the commanders.
~What are you thinking?~
I asked Eve through the inner-ear vibrations.
~Another trap, either in response to us surviving the first assault, or this has been the plan all along~
She reasoned.
~Slowly whittle away at our defenses, then when weâre most vulnerable, they come to finish us off~
Eve nodded once, âExactly.â She said aloud.
Kianna looked between us, âExactly what?â
I looked back at her, âWeâre thinking itâs another trap.â
Kiannaâs eyes grew wide, âNot again.â
And now we didnât even have the buses to bunker down between. We had our mobile repulser barriers, but they wouldnât be enough to cover our entire company. Best case scenario we could deploy our encampment shield walls we used at night, but all that shit took a long time to set upâalmost an hour even if we rushed it.
âMaybe we can blast our way outside? Thereâs still some sun peaking out, so at least itâs not totally sealed.â Gorgam offered.
Eve shook her head slowly, âWhatever we do, we need to make the decision fast.â
âWhy, whatâs going on?â Kianna asked, looking like a bundle of nerves.
Eve continued to shake her head, âI can smell it on the air, the stench of decay and death all around us.â
I looked behind us, then forwardânothing but darkness all around.
âYou meanâŠ?â I let the question drop.
Eve turned to me and nodded once, her expression grave, âThey are coming.â