Invasion Wars 1: Crimes of War (4 page)

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Authors: Ray O'Neil

Tags: #Genetic Engineering, #Science Fiction, #Galactic Empire, #Space Exploration, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Literature & Fiction, #First Contact, #Colonization, #Action & Adventure, #Exploration, #Alien Invasion, #War & Military

BOOK: Invasion Wars 1: Crimes of War
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“How are we going to get out of here now?” He shouted over the falling staircase and out of breath.

Konrad pulled him by the arm, leading him to the bedroom. “Same way they got in. Hold tight!”

Kicking what little remained of the door off of the entrance, one of the creatures fired upon the brothers, being pushed around as others poured in and scurried along the wall. Photos and decor exploded behind them as they outran the gunfire, hurrying to get behind the wall as they crossed the kitchen’s viewable area and into where the bedrooms where. Passing the doorway, Konrad shot up the window, the wind from being so high nearly sucking them out of the room with the glass shards. Landing onto the second floor behind them, a couple of the aliens already had them in their line of sight. Weapons raised, the skeletal aliens unloaded on them.

Leaping over the bed with a kinetic boost, Konrad moved his brother’s arms around his neck in mid air, carrying him through the window and outside into the open world. Wind rushed past them as they freefell in an arc, heading towards the ground far down below. Sticking his legs out in front of him, the kommando let out another kinetic boost, spinning himself to face the building’s frame. Bolts of electricity shot out from his hand and feet, attaching him to the wall, their descent slowing down with a metal-on-metal screech. The glass continued to fall into the dust covered streets below, while they hung there firmly in place, the wind and the sudden stop nearly knocking Emich out of his grip.

Having his gun hang on its strap, Konrad held himself with one hand while he used the other to open a panel on his left thigh armor. Pressing the second to top button, he closed the panel back up and connected his hand hook with the wall. “I have a flyer on its way to get us, all we have to do is hang around until it gets here.”

“How long will it take?” Emich shouted through the high winds.

“Only a few seconds.” His deep voice was still calm, the helmet's microphone able to amplify itself to be heard clearly.

From where they jumped from, the creatures stuck their heads out of the opening, guns first. Konrad tensed up. The treads on his forearms shot them to the right as the yellow dots flew down at them, shredding the wall where they were. The long gashes along the building shredded through the exterior, like riverbeds being made in an instant. Glowing shrapnel blew away with the wind, Konrad covering his brother with his body to protect him from the traces of hot metal heading towards them.

With his free hand up and covering his visor, the kommando quickly pulled up his carbine and tried to fire one handed — the amount of recoil limiting him to single shots. One of the bullets found its way into one of the creatures, knocking it off balance and out the window. Its guns still fired as it tumbled down past them, smashing and grinding against the building, pieces of debris bursting into the air with each impact. More of the creatures appeared, flipped over the window’s edges and kept their limbs on the surface. Galloping downwards towards the two, they closed in from the left and the right.

Konrad fired at whichever got closest, having to bounce the crosshair of his gun from side to side, only letting out enough gunfire to make them lose their grip and plummet down into the ever-increasing dust below. More alien aircraft flew by above them, sending an orange beam of light into the high road not too far from them. Huge bolts of electricity shot throughout the road, soon turning it into chunks of rubble that started to fall from its impact point. Buildings below the high road were crushed instantly, smashed inward by the thick massive blocks of destroyed roadway. Any of the towers used as support beams next to the road had the blots of alien weaponry travel through them as well, windows instantly bursting before the structure soon crumbled.

Dodging the next hail of lasers, Konrad sent himself to the left; Emich’s legs dangling helplessly in the opposite direction. Thinking an enemy aircraft was trying to ram them, Konrad aimed his carbine at the approaching vehicle. The ERA insignia on its stubby wings allowed him to finally let out a sigh of relief. His self-piloting recon flyer slowed down next to them and opened its side door. The two minigun turrets on the top of the flyer filled the sky with a powerful barrage of bullets, turning the window into a gaping hole and anything within it into clouds of purple blood.

Kicking off of the wall with a boost, Konrad flew toward the flyer, both hands outward. His free hand grabbed on, while his carbine was knocked out of his other — having it clatter against the edge before it spun its way down into the cloud below. Fighting the strong wind coming from the nearby explosions, Konrad held on tight as the flyer steadied itself. The aliens continued to come out of the windows, more of them opening up more from different levels. The turrets couldn’t keep up much longer, having too many to lower their growing numbers.

“Emich, climb up! Get inside!”

Following his brother’s orders, he used him as a ladder to crawl into the cabin, rolling off to avoid stepping on his fingers. Turning around, he stretched out an open hand. “Grab on!”

Inching up to clasp his hand onto Emich’s, he lifted himself up, his armor weighing him down. From the building, a spidery alien scurried passed the rest of them, joined by a few others. Using their sisters as decoys, they rushed through the wall of gunfire, closing in on the flyer. Leaping through the air, there was too many of them for the flyer to do any good. One of them wrapped its long arms around Konrad’s waste, two others holding onto his legs.

Losing his grip and overcome by the force, Konrad let go.

There was nothing either one of them could have done. All Emich could do was watch as his brother fell towards the city street below. Claws dug into his skin, tearing off everything they touched. With his last ounce of strength, Konrad pressed the button on his leg panel. It was the last thing Emich saw him do before his brother was engulfed by the smoke.

The flyer’s hatch closed up while it took off — the blue flames emiting out of its small rockets on its underbelly swinging out of hover mode to get him out of there. A sonic boom rang outside its thin armor, the flyer reaching Mach II with a sudden blast of its engines before the two could even get off the floor. He sat there, staring at the blank sheet of metal, his head slowly dipping to the floor. Quicker than he arrived… Konrad was gone.

The time with his brother was robbed from him. Time that Emich would never get back. A moment that could never happen again. Never be completed. His world would never be the same.

He stood up, wondering why to even bother. There was nothing for him on the floor, other than staying there until death does its deed. If only he was stronger. If only he was able to lift his brother into the flyer right away… it would have been different. He knew in his heart, his brother died because he was too weak, too useless.

Nothing but dead weight to everyone around him.

Sitting down, Emich’s hand fell from holding his small wound and flopped over his lap, his stinging back being soothed by the softness of the co-pilot seat. He looked at the passing city — buildings absent from where they were supposed to be, weird aircraft replacing the birds that would have been flying around, the lack of life around them. The feeling that everyone and everything they once knew was now dead and gone. If the adrenaline wasn’t still pumping through him, he probably would have passed out from the shock. Barely an hour ago he was fighting a hangover and now he is fighting to keep himself intact.

It stayed silent in the flyer the entire time.

 

Air rushed through the landing pad, the blue-hued engines lowering the flyer down to have the landing gear touch ground. The door lifted, the glare of the sunset entering the cabin. There was no going back, nowhere to call home. His fist clenched hard enough for his hands to feel like they were ready to bleed. Emich closed his eyes, unable to hear anything outside.

Konrad’s words from long ago echoed in his memory, back when he left to join the ERA.
Don’t waste your life anymore, Emich. Make me proud. Okay?

Standing before the light, Emich walked towards it. He knew what he had to do. He knew what was in his blood. The call to battle. There was only one thing on his mind the entire time he worked his way to become a soldier.

The Niflheim were going to pay for what they did.

 

Chapter 3

 

It was strange to feel a bed that wasn’t cold and metallic. It was even stranger that he could still feel anything at all. Emich sat up with a start, having no memory of when he was last conscious. The room was different than the cell he called home for several weeks. He actually had a whole room with all four walls.

Somehow, that addition of confinement gave him comfort. He could picture anything he wanted past the closed door. No matter what was behind it, the door was electronically locked. Emich tried to swing his legs out of the bed, but they refused. Just sitting down was draining him of all of his energy.

Lying back down to have the back of his head bash into the soft pillow, he enjoyed the comfort of a soft bed. So many little things he had taken for granted in the past, so many luxuries that he’s forgotten. The room was kept dim, lights coming from the bottom of the walls to give just enough brightness to see all of the body monitoring equipment. Looking down at his body, he was covered in medical stickers for every reason possible. The needle in his arm gave him a steady dose of something purple from an IV bag hanging next to his bed.

He would have torn it out of his arm by instinct if he had the strength to.

The door whooshed upwards with an electronic beep, the agent from before marching in. He had the same bulldog scowl he wore the last time Emich saw him, the scientist next to him looking more nervous than anything. It was cold in the room and the young man was sweating like he’s been running all over the place. If the agent treated his patients the way he treated Emich, his lackies were not any better off. Turning on his wrist screen, the scientist opened up a floating holo-page that showed Emich’s profile, as well as his current status.

Since the page wasn’t flashing red, Emich assumed he wasn’t dying just yet.

“Looks like his vitals are stable, sir,” The scientist rapidly said. His voice was faster than the words flying by on the holo-page. “No signs of any abnormalities. Heart rate is clear, air intake is clear, metabolism is clear…”

While he checked off everything important, the agent grabbed Emich by the head and spread his eyelid open, hard enough to have it feel like his skin was going to be torn off. Emich wanted to send a fist his way, but his muscles wouldn’t even let him tap his fingers. Shifting his head to the side once the agent was done looking at his eyes, Emich stared at the IV bag, the purple fluid steadily dripping down the tube and into his bloodstream. He knew whatever was in that bag had something to do with him in a state similar to being paralyzed. It was either that or it was the stuff they injected into him before.

What the hell did they do to me
, Emich thought, almost defeatedly.

He survived so far, but that only meant more tests. More things to mark down as “reasons to kill everyone in this place”. He regretted the idea of entering the program the day he woke up in his cell for the first time — watching the guards and the scowling agent dragging them away, kicking and screaming. They allowed the inmates to talk to each other, say everything on their mind.

They wanted that to happen, to have them ready to fight back when their cell was opened.

Emich kept his eyes away at the observing agent, the conversation about his medical report nothing but white noise. All he could think about was ending up like the others he saw in the hallway; the ones in the body bags. Being motionless was the least horrible thing that could have happened to him. But, with the agent in the room, it didn’t make Emich’s heart stop pounding.

Heavy boots calmly shuffled around the bed, the agent bending forward to face his test subject. “It appears you’ve complete phase one with as little complication as possible. Something tells me… we have some hope with you. Your inability to move is not one of them. We started doing that after sixty percent of our test subjects would grow feral and started costing this project more than it should in new hires.” He directed Emich’s eyes to the young scientist by looking over at him. “It’s why this one is more on the edge than usual. And we can’t risk that chance with
you
especially.”

Muscle relaxant, in a dose enough to keep his body limp yet still functional. It seemed to be cheaper and more “humane” than chaining him to a wall by the arms and neck. Emich almost forgot that there were still rules in the facility, that they had their limits. He could only imagine the state he would be in if they didn’t regulate the project. Thinking further into it, he was starting to be thankful that it was government owned and not a private one.

“Don’t get too comfortable, Mr. Aumeier,” the agent said with a coy smirk that mixed horribly with his permanent scowl. “Today, we are going to test the results.”

More staff members walked in and unhooked the bed from its locked position. Pushing it out of the room, they moved Emich out into the hallway; one of the staff members taking the needle out of his arm as they moved. The hallways was the same as last time he passed by, the only difference being that he was being wheeled over instead of dragged. Gunshots escaped from a closed door, a guard coming out and wiping blood off of his visor. Looking into the room, Emich saw the deceased test subject’s skin gradually peel itself off of his body, curling outwards.

His face was split in half and wrapping into a shrivelling roll behind his head by the time the door closed on its own, hiding the horrific scene.

Emich took a deep breath, trying to keep his mind clear of any thinking. He just focused on the overhead lights flying by as they went further into the facility and out of the phase one area. Going down an elevator and into a darker area of the place, they stopped shortly after the doors opened at the arrival of their new floor. He couldn’t see where they were heading, but seeing soldiers sitting and relaxing by one of the walls wasn’t a good sign.

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