            
| | Fan Fiction
Untitled
Chapter
I - The Toll of War
by Arian
Solberg
The countryside moved.
Alive with inhuman determination, a blanket of soldiers swept over hills
and rolled through the valleys. Flesh intertwined with cold steel, through
loops and back again to create a perfect army. Thousands of bodies moved
in unison as they had been ordered - to their salvation, to their pyre.
Each human, who only years before was unique and beautiful, now merely
existed as a cog in the indifferent game of war. Individually, they were
issued a weapon, and thus became machines. They had been twisted and bent
into hateful automatons that were forced to decide who had the right to
exist alongside them. Their movements now created a morose song that rolled
over the countryside and in their wake, was a trail of bitter tears and
withered hopes. These men would soon die.
Hours later, the pale
moon betrayed translucent heat waves against the brush.
Moving as a panther,
the Ghost flowed through the forest and onto the brink of a knoll that
overlooked the demons. He suppressed a gag as the binoculars focused in
on unheard of horrors. Vile snake-like beasts patrolled the outskirts of
a throbbing gray carpet. Bloodthirsty zerglings skittered across their
organic home in packs. Zerg drones moved about their business, oblivious
to the imminent attack only miles away.
The covert agent's
pupils narrowed to pinpoints as he watched his enemy. He began to count
the lethargic behemoths floating in the sky - a common way to discern how
many enemies there were. But there was something amiss. There were far
too few bugs in this colony to necessitate the army he was in. Why would
the confederacy order such a full-scale attack on what appeared to be a
vulnerable and insignificant target? Not having any answers for such questions,
he made a quick mental map of the terrain below him, and prepared to return
to his commander.
The wicked hiss of
a forked tongue slammed into his ears like a cannonball. He whipped his
head around and saw the vicious hydralisk only yards from his throat. He
instinctively reached for his weapon and then remained deathly still. While
cloaked, it would be next to impossible to be spotted without the aid of
an overlord. Still, the powerful jaws and natural scythes wielded by his
foe gave him ample reason to be nervous. A putrid smell that seeped from
its mouth made the soldier want to retch. It swayed in the moonlight, devising
an almost hypnotic dance. For a moment, their eyes locked and the Ghost
had to force himself to remain still as he stared into the soul of hell.
Then, as quickly as it had appeared, a bony tail carried the Zerg away
as if on a magic carpet. The soldier breathed a sigh of relief and took
a few moments to regain his composure. He then took one last look at targets
below him before moving back into the darkness as silently as he had arrived.
"You sure about this?"
The commanding officer eyed his recon agent.
"Absolutely sir, you
could send one third of this army and there would be no difficulties in
cleansing the entire area."
"I'll be the one to
make that decision. Now go find your team."
The Ghost nodded grimly
and vanished into a sea of marines. After taking a moment to ponder the
new developments, the commander turned to his flank and addressed a lieutenant.
"Well, that was certainly good news. Nevertheless, our orders stand. Prepare
the troops. We attack in one hour."
He then looked off
into the horizon and spoke quietly, more to himself then anyone else. "This
land will run crimson before the day is out..."
The famished zergling
eyed his prey intently. On the ashen planet, tender meat was hard to come
by, and the small rodent would make a fine meal. Keeping a lookout for
others of his brethren who might want an undeserved piece, the alien slowly
moved closer to his target. Muscles rippled in his flanks as he tried to
find a delicate balance between distance and silence. His eyes glinted
with greed as he prepared to make his leap. The crouched hind legs quivered
with anticipation, ready to deploy death at a moment's notice. But even
as temptation was literally yards away from his slathering jaws, instincts
would not fail him.
His attention was
snapped to the forest half a mile away. The trees swayed rhythmically,
not about to reveal their deadly mystery. He sensed something foreign and
mysterious but curiosity kept him rooted to the ground. Minutes passed
without development and just when he was about to return to his dinner,
a white-hot flare screamed out of the leaves and the trees came alive with
vigor. From what had appeared to be passive woods streamed hundreds of
soldiers; they sprinted towards the center of the meadow where their target
lay bare. The terrified zergling fled from the onslaught of marines, looking
for the assumed safety of the colony.
The army flew across
the field, fueled by their own rage and hatred. Some fired a spray of bullets
into the air in anticipation of the slaughter to come. War cries hung in
the air like a black cloud, always growing bigger and spurring the men
onward. They had been told there would be little resistance, which made
them all the more savage. Faster and faster they ran, unleashing all the
years of brainwashing and frustration in a tsunami of steel fury.
Suddenly, the earth
shifted. A low guttural roar moved over the land and stopped every man
in his tracks and ran tension into the air. The ground they stood on groaned
and rumbled at the disturbance, causing the over confident troops to stagger
back in confusion. The heaving soil pumped fear into their veins like an
incurable poison as they struggled to make sense of it all. Some turned
their backs to the terror and ran back to the forest, hoping to find salvation.
Others stood, too afraid or confused to do otherwise. Soil began to erupt
sporadically about their feet and they struggled to keep their balance.
The earth began to
boil and churn while the roar increased its intensity. Men fell to their
knees at the wicked sounds, refusing to again find their feet. Slowly but
adamantly, the countryside released a secret it had been harboring for
months. The burrowed aliens tore through the earth in an effort to get
free as thousands of beady eyes and slathering jaws leapt from the tainted
ground. Within seconds, the marines found themselves pitted against staggering
odds. Where once they were the favorite, now they were only lambs to the
slaughter. The ocean of hydralisks turned to their prey, eyeing them hungrily.
Silence once again dipped over the field until one lone soldier raised
his rifle above his head and opened his mouth to the world: "DEATH TO THE
ZERG!!!" And so, in a cacophony of wrenching bones and inhuman screams,
the battle was on.
No one was spared;
the hateful cataclysm was merciless with its insatiable appetite for life.
Men were hacked to their knees by the biological terrors and still fired
their weapons until every last ounce of strength had flowed from their
bodies. Those who were killed immediately were fortunate; many others died
a slow and painful death with cries of agony all around them. The once
peaceful meadow had been transformed into an orgy of crimson fire. Steel
clashed against bone in a bedlam held over fallen comrades and the living
envied the dead.
*
*
*
"Dead! They're all dead!"
Lieutenant Shugar towered over the board members with flying hair and bloodshot
eyes. "My entire damn army has been slaughtered! They never even had a
chance! Those.. those bastards knew we were coming! They knew! And I sent
my men right into their waiting jaws!" His voice shook the room while his
officers exchanged nervous glances.
A confident sergeant
named Troy strode forward and placed a hand on his maddened commander's
shoulder. "Sir, there was no way of knowing. They must have been underground
for months. You can't blame yourself. It won't help anything. We need your
sharp mind. Don't let it become clouded with anger."
"Who dares?!" Shugar
whirled around and faced the startled man. His maroon face betrayed a deep
primeval fury that consumed his entire being. Bearing white knuckles and
speaking through clenched teeth, the lieutenant addressed his officer.
"You, leave me to my pain! You cannot possibly imagine the anguish I have
caused this day! Thousands fell to the swarm on my orders, many with children
and wives who loved them dearly. I woke up a man, but I will sleep tonight
as death, the destroyer of lives. Now take your hand from my shoulder!
Fall back. For the love of God fall back or I can't be responsible for
what happens."
The sergeant shakily
nodded his head and took a step back. He then nodded to the rest of the
board and made a hasty exit.
Shugar took a deep
breath and ran a callused hand through his hair. He once again faced his
panel and spoke softly and slowly with great effort. "Reconnaissance.
I want twenty-four hour surveillance on that colony, and wire a message
to the fleet. Tell them we need more firepower down here. Tanks, ships,
marines… whatever they can muster. Those things are up to something, and
I'll be damned if we just let them do it. Now move!"
The room came alive
as the officers rushed to carry out the lieutenant's orders. Angry as he
was, they had all come to trust their commander, as he had a history of
intense battles and years of experience. Even under tremendous pressure,
he had a reputation of keeping his wits and not always laying all his cards
on the table. Even now, his fantastic brain was working fiercely to assess
the situation. He continued to brood all through the evening until finally,
he fell into a fitful sleep, dreaming of revenge.
Many miles away, a
man bled on the forest floor. He stumbled along blindly, gasping for air
and trying to endure the stinging branches which whipped across his face.
It had been a full day since the massacre, but he still fled from the merciless
demons that had slaughtered his comrades. He held an arm to the laceration
at his side, trying to assuage the bleeding. Although he felt the reaper's
hand already beckoning, years of brainwashing in the army had driven all
logic from his head. He ran now because he still could; no purpose or goal
in mind for he had no thoughts of again finding safety.
Each second that passed,
he swore by the hisses and beady eyes that he felt were close behind. There
was no escaping the terrible image of those beasts, ripping into his fellow
soldiers like Christmas presents. There was hatred now that welled up with
each drop of blood he lost. Hatred for not just his enemies, but himself.
He loathed his decision to flee, but there was no hope for anyone. It was
instinctive and impossible to deny.
He grimaced with pain
as each heavy footstep crashed to the ground. Although the night was warm
and he had been running for hours, he was very cold and could feel his
limbs hardening as the red water continued to flow. It became a struggle
to even breathe, let alone move through a dark forest. Vertigo set in and
his sight began to haze and blacken. He tried to scream, but no sound came
forth. His knees buckled and he crashed to the ground gasping for air but
knowing that the end was near.
As his vision became
utterly useless, he heard the movement around him. Leaves crunched loudly
under the weight of the foreigners. Even without sight, he could imagine
the wretched beasts with their lolling tongues and hungry eyes, waiting
for the perfect moment to suck the flesh from his bones. And with his last
few moments of consciousness, he felt the jarring of his body as unknown
creatures set upon him. Then, he felt the hands. They were good, strong
hands that felt safe and warm. As they moved about him in a caring way,
his mind slipped into a deep sleep with one final thought: He was with
humans.
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