Smoke rolled low across the streets, thick enough to taste. Every breath burned. The hiss of melting ice
filled the air like static, punctuated by short bursts of gunfire and the distant groan of collapsing steel.
The blue Spartor hadn’t moved far from the center of the block. It didn’t need to. The alien crouched
within a dome of shifting ice that pulsed like a living heart, drawing from every shattered hydrant and
ruptured water main around it. Every bullet that struck the barrier carved a crater that sealed again
within seconds.
Drake leaned against the twisted frame of a ruined transport, blood seeping through his torn pant leg.
The hit had come moments ago an ice shard that punched clean through his calf and melted almost
instantly, leaving a cauterized hole rimmed with frost. He’d wrapped the wound tight with a strip of
uniform to slow the bleeding and kept moving. Pain was background noise now.
Across the street, Ness ducked behind a barricade of debris, signaling what few soldiers remained. The
air smelled of iron. The once-organized line of Alliance troops had become scattered pockets of
survivors, each fighting from whatever cover they could find.
“Reload and rotate!” Ness shouted. “Left flank, thirty-meter push, keep the pressure up!”
Three soldiers obeyed, crawling forward through the rubble to new positions. Their rifles spat bursts of
blue-white light that carved more scars into the ice.
The blue Spartor finally shifted, lowering one arm. Water from the gutters and the pooled runoff coiled
upward, merging into his palm. It gleamed translucent for a second before hardening into narrow,
crystalline shards.
Drake saw it forming and yelled, “COVER! NOW!”
The first volley came like machine-gun fire. The shards screamed through the smoke, slicing through
metal, stone, and flesh. One soldier fell before he could move, another dropped beside Drake with a
hole through his chest plate. The air filled with misting red before freezing into a fine frost.
Drake’s radio hissed and died. He threw it aside and fired back blindly, the recoil driving pain up his
injured leg. “He’s cutting us apart!”
Ness slid across the pavement to cover beside him, reloading as he moved. “We can’t hit him from
here. He’s controlling the entire field.”
Drake grimaced. “Then we shrink it.”
The two men rose together and sprinted forward, firing in tandem. The rifles hummed against their
palms, bolts striking the same section of the barrier. The ice flared, cracked, and began to buckle.
Ness dropped to one knee and let loose another burst. This time the rounds punched through. One shot
struck the Spartor’s arm, then another, and another, until a final blast tore the entire hand away in a
spray of glowing fluid and shattered ice.
The alien’s roar cut through the battlefield, deep and metallic, the sound vibrating through the concrete.
Steam poured from the wound as it stumbled back, the barrier faltering for the first time.
“Got him!” Ness shouted, chest heaving. “He’s bleeding!”
But the victory lasted seconds. The Spartor slammed its remaining hand into the ground. Water burst
upward again, surging through cracks in the street to rebuild the shield. The new ice shimmered darker,
denser, like tempered glass.
Drake looked around. There were fewer than ten soldiers still standing. Some were out of ammunition,
others scrambling through the bodies for spare magazines. The sound of rifles grew uneven, desperate.
He limped to cover beside a half-buried troop carrier. The blood soaking his pant leg had frozen stiff in
the cold. “How many mags left?”
“Two,” Ness said. “And half the men don’t even have that.”
Drake stared across the ruined street at the towering shape behind its fortress of ice. “Then we make
them count.”
The next few minutes dissolved into chaos.
The Alliance troops fired until their weapons hissed empty. When the magazines ran dry, they
scavenged from the dead, switching rifles, sharing ammunition, throwing spent cells aside. The noise of
battle became fragmented, fading in and out like the last breaths of a dying machine.
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The Spartor stayed patient. Every time someone broke cover for more than three seconds, it found
them. A flick of its fingers, a flash of silver light, and another soldier dropped.
Drake tried to move positions, but his leg gave out, sending him to the ground. He crawled behind a
mound of debris, clutching his rifle. Ness hauled him the last few feet, eyes scanning the horizon.
“We’re running out of bodies,” Ness muttered.
“We already ran out,” Drake replied. His voice was hoarse, almost gone. “We just haven’t stopped
moving yet.”
Another burst of ice rounds shattered the concrete inches above their heads. The fragments stung
against exposed skin. The transport behind them groaned as the barrage chipped it apart.
When the noise stopped, Drake risked a glance. Only three soldiers were still firing, and then two. Then
one.
The rest lay scattered across the street, frozen where they fell.
Ness exhaled slowly. “That’s it. That’s all of us.”
They were cornered now, three living souls pressed against the side of a burning transport, the heat on
one side and the cold of the Spartor on the other.
The alien moved closer, its gait uneven from the missing hand but no less terrifying. Frost trailed
behind its steps. It raised its remaining arm, the air around it swirling with vapor. Tiny points of light
formed around its fingertips, hundreds of them, condensing into the shape of a dozen perfect, glistening
projectiles.
Drake braced the rifle against his shoulder, jaw tight. “On my mark.”
But he never gave it.
It came from nowhere, a throwing knife.
It cut through the smoke in a silver blur and struck the Spartor in the side of the head, burying itself to
the hilt. The alien’s concentration broke. The forming ice bullets disintegrated into mist.
Another knife followed, then another. Each landed with precision, thudding into armor and exposed
flesh in rapid succession. The Spartor staggered, twisting to find the source.
Ness blinked, disbelieving. “Who the hell?”
More shapes cut through the air. Throwing stars, balanced, spinning perfectly, found their marks one
after another. The first buried itself in the alien’s temple; the next two slammed into its eyes. Blue light
sprayed outward like shattered glass.
The Spartor bellowed, stumbling backward, swinging its remaining arm wildly. The final cluster of
stars hit deep into its skull. The glow in its chest flickered.
It fell to one knee. Then another.
With a sound like cracking ice, the creature’s entire body slumped forward, smashing into the ground.
The massive ice shield around it shattered and fell in fragments, raining across the battlefield like
frozen rain.
Drake raised his rifle and fired one deliberate shot into the back of its head. The echo bounced off the
ruins, then died.
Silence returned.
Ness stared across the street, breathing hard. “Tell me I’m not seeing ghosts.”
A figure stepped from the smoke.
Abby.
Her hair clung to her face with sweat and frost. Her jacket was too thin for the cold, her eyes too sharp
for her age. In her hands were the same knives her father had given her on her ninth birthday, the metal
darkened with alien blood.
Drake lowered his weapon slowly. “Abby… how, ”
She ignored him, gaze fixed on the fallen monster. “I saw what was happening.” Her voice was steady,
but each word shook with rage. “I saw them dying. You needed help.”
She looked down at the blades, the edges still trembling faintly in her grip. “Dad always said you only
get one perfect throw if it matters enough.”
Ness stood, taking a slow step forward. “You shouldn’t be out here.”
“Neither should any of you,” she said quietly.
For a long moment, no one spoke. The only sound was the dripping of water as the ice melted into
puddles around the alien’s body. Steam curled into the night air.
Drake finally exhaled, the tension in his shoulders easing just enough for exhaustion to take hold. He
glanced toward the distant ridge, where faint green light still pulsed, the green Spartor, silent, waiting.
Abby followed his gaze. Her hands tightened around the knives. “Now how the hell are we supposed to
kill that one?”