Half Life 2: Sidewinder

Joined
Aug 25, 2004
Messages
109
Reaction score
0
This would be my new fan fic that I'm screwin with. Sorry if it isn't straight action from beginning.. but I'm an english major so I had to throw some character work and exposition in there or I just couldn't feel right about it. Enjoy. OH and there's some language.




Awake.

Flickering neon lights, the musty smell of dust mites, a gentle rocking motion.

Lars’ hands shot out in front of him, fists clenched at ready. It was an old reflex from waking up in too many bloody situations.

His fists unclenched as he realized nothing was going to lunge at him out of the murky haze of his just waking eyes.

Unlike the jungles and harsh urban landscapes that he had become so used to waking up in, Lars found himself in slightly more pleasant surroundings.

A train car.

“**** me,” he said aloud.

A man in his late fifties with tired eyes and white whisps of hair sticking out of his ears turned to face Lars.

“Do you kiss your mother with that mouth?” It was a tone utterly bereft of emotion.

In one swift motion Lars lunged forward and gripped the man around the collar of his faded blue jumpsuit.

“I don’t need your lip old man, you have 10 seconds to explain to me where the hell I am, and how I got here, or I’m going to get awfully cranky.”

He didn’t seem phased by the outburst.

“Well, I can tell you for sure you’re on the M Line leading into City 17. In regards to the how you got here question, that might be more of an issue for a priest than an old broken down mechanic.”

Lars didn’t seemed pleased with an answer.

“Five minutes ago I’m sitting on my couch eating an egg salad sandwich and watching bass fishing and some asshole in a blue suit just barges in out of nowhere and tells me he has a job for me. Next thing I know, everything goes black and I’m here. You wanna tell me how a priest could explain that one gramps,” Lars said in a tone barely above a growl.

“You’re right buddy, you don’t need a priest, you need a shrink.”

Another response that didn’t seem to tickle Lars’ fancy. He ran his hands through his hair, burying his face in his palms.

“Okay, could you spare me the “I’m a tough old man who makes wise cracks” bit for just long enough to tell me where the hell City 17 is?”

Hearing this, the old man looked at Lars as if he’d walked into the train car wearing tin foil on his head.

“Southern Lithuania”

Lars nodded incredulously.

“So I somehow got from upstate New York to Southern Croatia in the blink of an eye.”

“Well, a blink of your eye, not necessarily everyone else’s”

Lars was beginning to suspect the old man knew more than he was letting on, but decided to drop the issue. He’d met men like that before, they’d only say as much as they wanted to, and Lars had the feeling the old man had reached his limit.

Lars scanned the car for any other passengers he could interrogate, but found none. It was just him, the old man, and a whole lot of questions.

He sat back in his seat and tried to get his head straight by looking out of the window. The sun was just rising over the horizon, and it cast a icy blue light across the gently swaying fields that flew past the window. The sight of it soothed Lars.

He let his shoulders and eye brows sag, shook his head lightly from side to side and took a deep breath, while counting to fifteen. It was old stress relief technique he’d learned from a friend in the NSA.

In moments he felt his head clear and his ability to think return to him.

“What in the hell was going on?”

His mind reeled through every possible explanation. Everything from government kidnapping to alien abduction but none of it seemed to fit.

His thought process was interrupted by the lurch of the train beginning to slow to a halt. Like a weed growing up through the cracks in a sidewalk, City 17 seemingly popped up out of the nothingness of the Lituanian countryside. Massive stone buildings loomed on the horizon, relics of the era of Soviet dominance.

“The Reds sure did love shit big,” Lars muttered to himself. The old man nodded in agreement.

The train’s breaks screamed as it lurched to a halt in a towering train station with dusty, weather worn skylights far above.
It looked pretty much like any other Eastern European train station, big, square, gray and sparse. Russian buildings always reminded Lars of Mauseleums. Considering how Stalin treated his loyal subjects, maybe the style choice was an accurate one. Lars could just make out figures milling around in the early morning light.

“Time to get some answers gramps,” he said, rising to his feet.

He stepped to the trains door and waited for them to open. The old man was now standing behind him. He whispered something in Lars’ ear.

”Don’t be surprised if the answer you get isn’t the one you’re looking for.”

As they say in the movies, he didn’t like the sound of that.

The doors snapped open with surprising efficiency and Lars found himself in the crisp dry air of the train station. He was about to go find someone to strangle information out of when a high pitched whirring sound from behind him made him wheel around like a man who’s back was on fire.

“What the shit?!”

The thing was about the size of a basketball, a little steel, hovering basketball. It rotated in the air, moving within inches of his face. In a normal situation, Lars wouldn’t have stood for such a thing, but at the moment he found himself transfixed by what he saw.

There was a blinding flash, and then the thing zipped high up in the air and out of view.

He gave up trying to figure what was going on his own. He considered himself a fairly smart person, but it was clearly beyond his powers of comprehension to explain this situation.

As if in a daze, he made his way up a set of concrete stairs and into large walkway. More people were milling about in the hallway, going one way or another. They all carried that million mile stare that the old man had sported. That, however, wasn’t what most caught Lars’s attention. Standing at the end of the hallway, in front a fifteen foot tall chain link fence and some sort of check point, was a figure in the most bizarre looking gas mask Lars had ever seen. It had bright, glowing blue eyes and looked to be made out of some sort of advanced polymer.

“This sumbitch’ll have answers,” Lars thought to himself.

With his massive 6’5 frame, Lars managed to cover the distance between him and sentry in only a few strides.

“Hey buddy,” he said as he put his hand on the sentry’s shoulder.

Lars knew the moment his hand touched the smooth metallic material of the mysterious figures shoulder pad that he’d made a mistake.

He saw the tell tale signs of a coming storm: tensed shoulders and neck, moving forward on to the balls of the feet, compression of the spine.

When the blow came Lars was ready. In fact, after so much time chasing after whispers and smoke, the prospect of a real physical foe was an exciting one. In a well practiced motion the guard pulled a mean looking baton-like object off his belt and whipped it at Lars’s face.

These moments always felt like a dance to Lars.

”And one two three four… one two three four,” it always popped into his mind at moment like these.

He squeezed his against his right shoulder and slouched to the right. He heard the baton crackle with electricity as it whizzed within centimeters of his face.

”And one two three four.. one two three four.”

The failed blow left the guard badly off balance with his arms outstretched over Lars’s head, he seized the opportunity. Bracing the opposite side of the guards arm with his left hand, he brought up his right to strike the elbow with animal like brutality. It gave way, the snapping ligaments letting out soft pops like dry cracking twigs. The baton clattered to the floor. Mr. guard now found himself with elbows that happened to bend in opposite directions.

The next strike, a swift chop to the voice box caused him to double over, gasping. Little the guard know, bending over as he did left him open for a knee to the face. Even through his armored mask, the blow sent his head snapping back ferociously. He fell to the floor, still as ice.

Harsh, muffled voices from behind Lars let him know the fight wasn’t over.

“And one and two and three”

With his back still facing his new attackers, he swept up the baton. Guessing the distance based on sound of the clattering footsteps, Lars wheeled and struck in one motion.

The blow caught the poor sap square in the face, he hit the floor like a gymnast failing the dismount. We’re talking at least a five tenths deduction.

More guards were streaming out of a door to his right, he counted at least six of them, all suited in armor and wielding batons, luckily he hadn’t spotted a gun yet.

He coiled up his back like a puma ready to strike, staring his closest foe straight in the eyes.

“You may bring me down, but your friend here just developed a limp.”

This guard prepared for the attack he thought was coming. The attacker that ran up to catch Lars from behind didn’t however. He happened to be lucky recipient of a baseball swing to the knee, more human origami ensued.

It was then that they brought him down. Something hard collided with the back of his head and all went black.
 
Wow, really good so far, the way you describe things is really well written.
 
That was really good.

Don't be afraid to spend a little more on his backstory. After, backstory creates depth which creates a better story and understanding of the character.
 
Lars awoke to oncoming headlights, bright, blue, oncoming headlights. He lurched, startled by the vision, and found himself restrained by something. As the grogginess of his recently bashed mind began to fade away, the reality of the situation set it. He found himself bolted into a bare metal chair in an empty windowless room. The things he saw hadn’t been headlights but in fact the eye pieces of one of those disturbing gas masks. One of the freaks stood only inches from his face. He did what any self-respecting American would do in that situation, he head-butted the guy.

His captor didn’t seemed pleased to have a solid forehead shoved into his face, and responded accordingly, by giving Lars a swift pop to the chest with one of the batons.

Much to Lars’s surprised he felt a searing electrical current surge through his body as the weapon collided with him. He strained in his seat, struggling with all of his might to contain the blood curdling screech that had welled up inside of him. He somehow managed to keep it down, denying his captor the pleasure.

“Note to self, avoid those things,” Lars thought.

The guard leaned in again, Lars could feel some sort of stale, warm gas emitting from the mask.

“Sit still.” The voice was harsh and metallic, like it had been recorded on a hand held recorder and then played through a broken-down fifties era intercom system.

“Fair enough,” Lars replied.

“Name and ID number,” The guard said.

A light went on in Lars’s brain, certain possibilities had been eliminated. This was some sort of military situation, these people wanted his military ID.

“Special Agent Lars Keller, 49339221”

The guard looked down to some sort of portable readout on his arm and began typing in information.

After a moment a tinny voice emitted from the thing.

“ID not on file.”

Without a word, the guard gave Lars another knock with the baton. This time, a tiny yelp managed to escape from his lips.

“Name and ID number.”

“Jesus, I just GAVE you my ID number,” he said through gritted teeth.
The guard leaned in close again, holding the little computer up to Lars’s face. He typed in the information Lars had given him before and then hit the button.

“ID not on file.”

The guard then titled his head to the side as if to say,

”Care to explain that?”

“How the hell should I know why I’m not in your little arm computer gadget?”

The guard started to reach for his baton again.

”Wo.. wo.. wo.. take it easy with the shock stick, hot shot. This has gotta be some kind of misunderstanding. I’m not from around here, I’m an American.”

At the sound of this the guard’s body language changed instantly. Something about what Lars had said had shaken him up good. Without out so much as a word, he turned to the solid looking metal door behind him, and prepared to leave. As his hand touched the handle, a hard knock issues from the other side. He reached up and pulled back a metal slat that revealed a narrow window in the door. Another guard stood on the other side.

“I’ve been dispatched to overlook this Detainee, you are relieved of duty.”

Lars’s captor looked relieved indeed.

He disengaged large deal bolt and jerked the door open. The other guard stepped immediately inside.

Lars felt his blood run cold when he saw what the new arrival held in his hand. A narrow curved blade, about 6 inches long, was just visible.

The two guards nodded to each other, then the first turned to leave. As he did, a flurry of motion erupted. It happened so fast it took Lars a moment to understand what had happened.

The guard who’d beaten Lars with the baton lay in a crumpled heap on the floor, a steady stream of blood flowing from his neck. Lars ran it over again in his mind. Lars distinctly remember seeing the new arrival shove his nasty looking blade up and under the other guards mask, burying it in his neck. That just didn’t make sense however, and yet, there he was, dead as could be.

Lars had begun to question his own sanity when the new arrival slammed the door shut and struggled to remove the mask.

“Well I’ll be god damned.”

On the other side of the mask was the last thing Lars had expected, a radiant red head with bright blue eyes and pockets of freckles scattered across her face.

“I’m thinking the opposite actually,” she said in a deep throaty voice.
 
“Hey Lady, care to give a fella a hand,” Lars said, straining against his restraints.

She swept up a strange looking key ring off of the fallen guards belt. She paused for a moment to find the right key, then inserted it in a key hole inches beneath Lars’s crotch. She turned it and the restraints snapped open.

“Damn lady, you don’t mess around, shouldn’t we at least get to know each other first?” Lars said, a cockeyed grin creeping across his lips.

“Keep getting fresh hot shot, you might find yourself back in that chair.”

Lars had risen to his feet and was rubbing his freshly released wrists.

“A thousand apologies m’lady, Might I inquire about your no doubt beautiful name, so I know what to name my first girl?” Lars said while performing a dramatic curtsey.

As much as her face tried to hide it, her eyes betrayed a softness toward him.

“Scarlett.. Scarlett Vrump.”

Lars stifled a giggle at her last name. He held out his hand.

”Lars Zeller’s the name.”

She nodded, gave a weak smile, then they both stood in silence for a moment.

She was the first to speak up.

“So which do you prefer, survival, or idle chitchat?”

“I’m gonna go out on a limb here and say survival, Lets get the hell out of here,” Lars said, moving toward the door.

“Wo there sparky, did you just expect to go waltzing out of heavily fortified covenant facility?”

“Covenant hm… sounds menacing enough,” Lars thought to himself.

“Now that you mention it maybe that isnt’ the best idea in the world. I’m open to suggestions.”

Lars noticed one of Scarlett’s eyebrows raise.

“I don’t know if I like the look of that.”

She slipped the mask back on and grabbed the baton off of the floor. Grabbing Lars around the collar she held the baton beneath his neck, shoving him toward the door.

“Move it prisoner,” the voice was gruff and metallic, indistinguishable from any of the other guards voices he’d heard.

“AW.. COME ON. The old smuggle out an ally as a hostage routine? That only works in bad movies. Don’t tell me the next stage of this plan involves crawling through ventilation shafts somehow.”

She pressed the baton harder against his neck.

“You better pray it works, now move.”

He slid the bolt on the door and it lurched open, a dark hallway appeared on the other side.

As they rounded the corner Lars found himself unable to contain the comment any longer. He whispered back to Scarlett.

“Last name Vrump? Middle school must have been rough.”

“You have no idea,” she replied.
 
Jesus.. I wrote this at like 4 am and somehow replaced Combine with Covenant.. A THOUSAND apologies.. No flames please
 
Finally this story is starting to hit its groove, Okay, here's a fairly massive update, I hope you likely, it may seem like just random action now, but don't you worry, Theres a rhyme and reason to all of this.

The unlikely pair worked their way down an unlit hallway. They occasionally passed more solid steel doors, luckily there were no sounds of torture coming from underneath them. They reached the end of the hallway and came to rickety looking wooden door, faint gray light flowed in from a slit underneath.

Lars had a thousand questions bouncing around inside his head. He wanted to kick himself for screwing around before when he could have been getting answers. Now he had to wait until they were both safe before he could shed some light on the disturbing events going on around him.

Scarlett grasped the doorknob and slid it open. Lars half expected that they would walk straight out on to the surface of the moon or something as bizarre as the day had been so far. Luckily it was nothing more than what looked like a broken down apartment building. The floor, nothing more than bare concrete, was covered with strange unrecognizable stains. The walls were papered with hideous looking brown wallpaper that was badly stripped and warped in many places. The air hung with the scent of mildew, dust, and another smell that Lars couldn’t quite place, but it was vaguely reminiscent of urine.

“Nice digs,” Lars whispered as they worked their way down the hallway. As they approached doors that lead into the stairwell, Lars was able to look out of a window to the city below. At first glance it looked like a standard eastern European town square. Large, gray project-like buildings intermixed with quaint little shops and unmistakable roman-catholic architecture. More people wearing the faded blue jumpsuits he’d seen the people in the Train station wearing were walking about on the street. This was the extent of the normalcy however. More of the guards that he assumed were part of this “combine” walked the street. These guards carried not only batons, but also some ridiculously advanced looking assault rifles.

”I’d love to get my hands on one of those,” he thought to himself.

In the very center of the square was a towering video screen. A non-threatening looking man was saying something, but Lars couldn’t make it out.

Scarlett gave him a gentle nudge to break his gaze.

“Get moving, we don’t have all day,” begrudgingly, Lars agreed.

The made their way down a winding cement staircase, their footsteps echoing on the hard walls. After traveling down four flights of stairs, they reached a door that lead into the lobby. Lars felt his pulse jump when he noticed four armed combine sitting on a beaten down couch. They sat completely motionless, their masked heads slung to the side like a dozing college student. They didn’t speak, they didn’t even look like they were breathing.

“What the hell?” Lars whispered
“Combine break time, now shut the hell up before you get us killed,” she snapped. With the cold metallic voice and mask, Lars found it hard to believe that she was six feet of sexy redhead underneath.

The couch where the combine sat was only feet from the doorway, so they had to approach it to get to the street. As they approached the guards all rose to their feet simultaneously. They didn’t seem startled or shaken. Lars had assumed they’d been asleep, but the way that they’d gotten up, it now seemed like they were just sitting there motionless.

“Transferring the prisoner back to the spire,” Scarlett said, praying the voice modulator would hide the trembling in her voice.

The guards nodded and returned to their seats, still as tombstones.

In moments they found themselves outside on the street. The sky was gray above, casting shallow, barely visible shadows across the landscape. Lars stopped for a moment taking stock of the situation. It was just so strange. Some foreign force had completely occupied this town. In this modern day and age you didn’t just go occupy a town in Lithuania and have it go completely unnoticed. Where were the UN peacekeepers, or the US for that matter. A powerful, aggressive regime occupying a small defenseless country, it sounded like the kind of thing the American government would be all over. Lars checked to see if there were any guards within earshot, and, seeing there weren’t any, he leaned back to speak to Scarlett.

“Do you realize how ****ed up and crazy this situation is?”

She nodded.

“You don’t know the least of it…,” she said pausing for a moment.

“You haven’t seen it have you?”

Again, he didn’t like the sound of that.

“Seen what exactly, don’t tell me there’s more freaky shit hiding in the shadows somewhere.”

She gave a soft little laugh, then wheeled him around toward the building they’d just walked out of.

For the first time in 25 years, Lars Zeller felt himself go weak in the knees.

“That my friend, is what we call the Spire.”
 
It was like nothing he’d ever seen. Some disturbing amalgam of a 14th century stronghold and the design of a server rack. A wall, at least a hundred fifty feet tall stretched all the way across his view. It actually cut through the building they’d just walked out of. The wall looked like it was made of some sort of pitch black metal. It wasn’t like any metal he’d ever seen however, it had no shine to it. It looked more like a plastic in fact, but he somehow doubted that they could make a wall out of plastic. It wasn’t level, and smooth like most walls however, it was covered with massive indents and outcroppings giving it a strangely organic feel, almost like rather than being built it had just sprouted up out of the asphault.

Still reeling from the view of the wall, Lars felt himself wondering what Scarlett meant when she had mentioned “The Spire.” His gaze continued upward and his curiosity was soon answered. A tower, like something out of ancient greek literature, stretched up into the heavens. He had to crane his neck backwards to even approach the top of it, but when he did he saw that it penetrated the cloud cover.

“Jesus, Mary, and Joseph.”

It was made out of the same dull organic metal that the wall was constructed out of. It just didn’t look like a building that could have been built by human hands. Looking at it, one thought immediately popped into his mind, the bean stalk. At that moment he felt like Jack, waking up in the morning to find his magical seed had grown up into the heavens. Except inside of a thick healthy vine, it was gnarled black javelin, piercing the sky.

“You know what, I’m not even going to bother asking what that thing is.”

Scarlett nodded again.

It was at that moment that one of the guards patrolling the square noticed the two of them, standing, staring up at the spire.

In an instant he was behind them, rapping his baton on Scarlett’s disguised shoulder.

“Orders,” he barked.

Lars prayed that Scarlett would know how to deal with this. The moment of silence that followed demonstrated to Lars that his prayers would most likely go unanswered.

“Orders!” the guard barked again, his body language looking more agitated.

“I’m transferring the prisoner to...” the combine guard cut her off.

“Orders, show me your orders!” He said, gesturing toward the small computer readout on his wrist.

Unless Scarlett could somehow produce said orders, the jig was up.

As always happened when things got rough, he felt the world slow down. The scene around him came alive in vivid detail. Six guards including the one interrogation them. Three had their backs turned toward a security check point on the other side of the square. Two others were hassling a group of five civilians about 30 yards to opposite side of the square. He also saw a dark alley within about 20 yards, and a deserted coffee shop about 30. He let it all soak in for a moment, and then he knew what to do. The timing and execution had to be perfect, but he figured he had a chance to save the both of them. Scanning one last time to make sure the other guards in the area were distracted, Lars made his move.

He lifted Scarlett’s baton, still pressed against his neck, and then drove his elbow into her stomach. He did it just hard enough to make it look convincing. She doubled over, obviously playing along, he’d hoped she would understand.

After using the elbow to free up some space, he fell to the ground and executed a sweep, sending both Scarlett and the guard plummeting toward the concrete. They fell in a heap, on top of each other, and Lars was already on the move.

His feet pounded the concrete as he motored for the alley, praying that Scarlett could take her time getting up, just enough to delay the guard. His thighs burned as he pushed himself to the limit of human exertion.

20 yards.

15 yards.

10 yards.

That was as far as he got before the guard opened fire. A stream of bullets churned up the concrete only inches to his left, sending up a cloud of choking fragments and powder. Planting his right ankle he threw his shoulders to his left, juking his body just as the guard corrected his aim, sending another concrete geyser up to his right. While he managed to avoid the full on stream, one of the bullets grazed his shoulder. He felt his searing flesh scream, but stayed focused on getting to the alley. The guard stopped to reload and it was just the window he needed to close the remaining distance to the cover of the alley.

As he entered it he found 30 foot high walls in three direction with a metal door at the end of the alley which looked ever so locked.

He hadn’t planned on escaping this way anyway.

He scanned the alleyway for a place to hide, and found a large dumpster right next to entrance to alley, he ran behind it, crouch, and waited.
 
In the 8 or so seconds that passed as he waited for his pursuer he ran over the situation in his head. He had banked on the fact that the guard wouldn’t open fire outright, but decide to chase him down and investigate first. He’d underestimated the tenacity of the combine, it would be the last time that was for sure. But it also might be the last time he did anything. The other guards in the square were alerted for sure, and were no doubt en route to his little alley hideaway, only moments behind the first pursuer. His window for survival was growing slimmer and slimmer.

It was then that the guard rounded the corner. He burst into the alley too quickly, without surveying his surrounding first. It was a rookie mistake, and one that Lars had every intention on capitalizing on . Moving with the conviction of a man push into the most dire of cornesr, he crept out from behind the dumpster, and up behind the combine trooper. The last thing that passed through the guard’s mind was the feeling of strong, sure hands on his neck, and then a sharp pop, and blackness.

His body fell limp like a sleeping snake. Before the body hit the ground Lars had the trooper rifle in his hands. Praying that it worked and fire like a normal rifle, Lars found trigger and magazine cartridge.

“This’ll do nicely”, he muttered to himself pulling some odd boxy looking clips out of a pouch on the fallen soldier’s belt.

Going prone in the dirt along side the dumpster he found the position with the best cover, the dumpster right in front of him with the gun and his left shoulder just exposed. He trained the sight on the corner leading out into the square, and waited.
 
At the sound of fleet footsteps approaching, Lars tensed his finger on the trigger.

The combine's shadow gave him away before he rounded the corner. Lars took a bead on the spot that he knew his prey would round the corner.

He let rip at the exact right instant, the gun letting out a high pitched spout. The cone of fire was impossible small. The bullet caught the unsuspecting guard in the upper chest, neck, and head, with many penetrating through to leave deep ragged holes in the brick wall behind him. His body was thrown hard against the wall and went still.

Lars looked for somekind of ammo readout, but found none that he could make out. He prayed that he had enough bullets to survive. It proved to a moot point however, as a thundering explosion ripped through the air out in the courtyard. Laying on the ground as he was, he felt the concussion hit him full force. He had to struggle to remain concious.

After the bells in his head stopped ringing, Lars rose to his feet and crept to the corner looking out on the courtyard.

"Well I'll be..."

The smoking remnants of what looked like a car sat only yards from the checkpoint where the combine troopers had been standing. All that remained of them was a smoking crater.

The vision of it made his mind flash back instantly to belgrade.

The look in the woman's eyes before she detonated the bomb, the sound of the air sucking in before the massive explosion. The sight of a boy, no more than 12 years old cast into the air like a rag doll.

He shook his head, trying to get a grip of himself.

There were more pressing matters to attend to, like finding Scarlett.

The square was in chaos. The guards that had been rushing to bring down Lars had turned tail to investigate the explosion. The air was filled with choking, arcid smoke and the occasional flack of debris still rained down from the sky. Lars scanned frantically for a Combine trooped that looked strangley out of place.

It was then that he felt a gentle tap on the shoulder, he turned to see Combine soldier who deliver a sharp elbow blast to the chest.

"Thats for before."

Lars was surprised how relieved he was to see her alive.
 
Meh, It looks like theres very little interest in this story, So I guess I'll move on, thanks to the people who did offer feedback though
 
ive just read half of it, ill read the rest later, i really like what i see!
its a shame you decided to discontinue it :(
 
If people want me to.. I'll write more, But I was more writing just for people to enjoy it.. If people aren't.. Then I really see no reason to write more
 
keep going m8. well cool story (check out my latest no-feedback one) :LOL:
 
Alright, Sounds good, I enjoy writing these things, So I'll keep going. Thanks for the encouragement.
 
I guess you could call this, back by popular demand, without further ado.


“So now what?” Lars asked.
Scarlett paused for a moment, rifling around in a pouch on her belt. As she did, the combine soldiers began to form up, organizing themselves to make a perimeter around the square. Lars was surprised how organized and focused they were after taking such heavy casualties. He couldn’t help but feel a certain respect for them. Despite this respect, he knew he would kill more of them that day.

The pair of fugatives only had moments before the combine would reach their side of the square, and when they did, the sight of a combine trooper fraternizing with a known trouble maker would no doubt blow her cover immediately.

“Uh.. Ms. Vrump, We might want to get this show on the road,” he said, nudging her in the side.

Lars then noticed that the object that she’d pulled from her belt was an old gold watch. She flipped it open and glanced at the time.

“No rush,” she said, flipping the watch shut again.

The combine troopers had completed their perimeter on the opposite side of the square and they were now working their way over to Lars and Scarlett.

“No, seriously, I don’t think they want to invite us over for tea,” he said, nudging her again, harder this time.

She pushed him back this time.

”Why don’t you just take a deep breath?”

One of the guards had spotted them. He spoke in a receiver on his wrist, and the other combine in the area were immediately alerted. Several broke from their ringed perimeter of the square to pursue the pair.

“See, that’s what I’m talking about, now I’m going to have to kill all of them. Do you think that will be easy little missy?”

She held up her hand, silencing him.

“In 5..4..3..2..,” her countdown was cut short by the sizzling sound of two rockets firing from two separate windows on opposite sides of the square. They ripped through the air, detonating in the middle of the combine ranks, sending a plume of flame, dust and debris. One unlucky combine trooper was cast up into the air colliding with the jumbotron screen far above.

“DOWN!” Scarlett said, throwing them both to the concrete as another explosion went off in the abandoned coffee shop not 20 yards from where they stood. Lars shielded his face with arms as a wave of broken glass and concrete washed over them.

His ear ringing, his face and eyes burning, the only thought that ran through Lars’ mind was, “Find Cover.” He brought up the mental image of the square before all hell broke lose, trying to find something near enough to find good cover behind. He remembered a broken down van about 15 feet from the entrance to the alley. Not waiting for the dust to settle, he blindly grasped out in the gray murk for Scarlett, finding her, he grabbed her arm and dragged her in the direction of the Van. They reached it just as the debris cleared and the world came back into view.

With their back to the van however, they were unable to see what transpired, but as the ringing in Lars’ ears faded, they were able to hear. The sounds of gun fire rose up like water hitting a metal roof in a spring thunderstorm.

Wheeling to get a better view Lars saw a group of 25 or so men and women in blue jumpsuits streaming out of the now demolished coffee shop. They each held one of the fancy shmansy assault rifles that Lars now carried. They moved in coordinate columns, out from the coffee shop and across the square. With startling precision they moved from cover to cover, picking off combine solider left and right.

“Shit!” Scarlett said, ripping the mask from her face just as one of the attack groups reached them.

“FREEZE!” One of them men yelled out as he trained his rifle pair and fired one reflexive shot. The bullet hit the wall not an inch from lars’s face, spraying him with concrete.

Scarlett let the mask fall to the ground holding up her hands.

“Jesus Timpson, Watch where you shoot that thing!”

He stopped, staring incredulously.

“Vrump?! Is that you?!”

“No, its some other human dressed as a combine!”

He nodded.

“Stay under cover, we can handle this,” Timpson said.

Lars hesitated, not one to back out of a fight, but decided to do what he said, crouch back behind the van.

“KEEP PUSHING FORWARD!” Timpson barked, spraying more assault rounds into the cool afternoon air.

In a matter of moments, every combine soldier in the square was dead. It was a perfectly executed ambush, the combine had been taken completely off guard.

The 4 or so attack groups regrouped back in the middle of the square amid riotous cheers of victory. Lars decided that it was time to join them and see if he could help. He sprinted across the square just as the group began advancing forward again. Scarlett yelled at him to stop, but decided to follow anyway. The group headed forward in two columns, one giving cover, the other advancing, they alternated that way, leap frogging across the square. They were headed toward the building that Scarlett and Lars had just left. Lars reached them just as they piled up near the entrance. He tapped one of the fighters on the shoulder, he was a medium height Asian man with dark, brooding eyes.

“Hey, where are we headed,” Lars said.

The man looked startled, but recognized that Lars was no threat.

”The Lock up, we’ve got some of our people to pick up,” he said between gasping breaths.

“Mind if I join you,” Lars said, extending his hand for a hand shake.

The man took it, and shook it firmly.

“We can always use another gun, welcome aboard.”

Lars took his position with his back to the wall, and waited from an attack order to come down the line. Scarlett stood beside him, looking shaken, but still ready to roll with the punches.

Two soldiers standing near the entrance pulled objects from their belts and hucked them in the open door way.

“GRENADE!”

Everyone covered their ears as the two blasts went off simultaneously.

“GO GO GO!”

The line of jumpsuited men charged forward into the smoking entrance to the tenement building.
 
ya, please dont say you are gonna stop. This is the best story so far.
 
Sprinting through the choking, smoke filled air with only the sound of harsh breathing and pounding footsteps to guide him, Lars found him in the same lobby that he’d just crept out of only minutes before. As the dust settled, the badly mangled bodies of the guards who’d been “taking a break” on the couch before, appeared out of the haze.

While the others made a quick sweep of the room, covering all of the exits, a tall blonde soldier near the bodies held a fist out toward a shorter, squat polish-looking man who pounded it.

“Nice toss Walksi.”

“Hell yah it was,” he replied.

With this the man bent over one of the fallen combine.

“How’d you like the grenade salad Mr. Badass?”

The taller man laughed out loud. It was a strained, forced laugh, almost as if the man saw more of himself in the dead combine soldier than he liked.

From the other side of the room Timpson barked at the two.

“Walksi! Trevors! Quit dicking around, Do you think we have all day here?”

They nodded and jumped back into line.

After sweeping the lobby, the group had bunched up at the base of the staircase, waiting for the go code from Timpson. Their eyes were haggard, and rough, like men who’d been on their feet too long. Seeing this, Lars felt an instant kinship toward.

Lars looked back to find Scarlett leaning against a wall, running her fingers through her crimson. He walked up, placing a hand on her shoulder.

”Hey red? You holdin’ up alright? Things got heavy pretty fast.”

Her face went instantly still and hard, and she pulled away from him.

“I’d watch your own ass out there, I can take care of myself,” she hissed.

Lars shrugged.

”Woah… no sweat, you’re obviously in control of things, but a day like this could wear on anyone.”

She ignored him and took her place in line behind the soldiers waiting at the foot of the stairs.
Shaking his head, Lars followed suit.

Beginning to wonder what the hold up was, Lars looked over to Timpson, who he assumed was the commander.

He was talking into some kind of radio receiver on his wrist. From the sound it, he was getting some sort of recon information from scouts in the area.

Lars could only make out clips and phrases, but suddenly Timpson’s body language change. He went tense, his right fist clenching at his side.

“You’re ****ING KIDDING ME! I thought you said we’d have at least 15 minutes!”

Lars couldn’t hear the response, but from Timpson’s reaction, it clearly wasn’t a satisfactory one. He sprinted the front of the line, and started frantically gesturing up the stairwell.

”MOVE MOVE MOVE, ON THE DOUBLE!”

Like a racing horse spurred out of the starting gate, they fired up the staircase, clattering booted footsteps echoing off of the concrete walls as they want.

Lars couldn’t shake the image of Timpson being so spooked from his mind. In the chaos of the gunfight in the square he had been completely cool and collected, for something to shake him so much, it had to be nasty indeed.

A heavy thumping vibration from somewhere off in the distance thrummed through the concrete walls sending a fine sheet of dust up into the air. Lars noticed nervous glances start to creep across the faces of the soldiers in his immediate vicinity. The pace picked up as they raced up the flights of stairs.

As they neared the top the vibration became much more intense and constant, coming in second intervals. At this point the nervous tension became outright panic.

Just as Lars was about to ask what was going on, a jarring explosion ripped through the wall not feet from where he stood, revealing blue sky and the most hideous monstrosity that Lars had ever seen.

Several soldiers screamed out in perfect unison.

“STRIDER!”
 
Back
Top