It was just another beautiful day on the frontline. It wasn’t often that a painter would be given such a broad canvas to lay red stains upon, but a starving artist wouldn’t complain about such a thing. Would they? The hiss of rifle rounds whipped through the air from east to west, screams followed their brief bouts of silence but again, they were brief. There were no tanks, no plains, oil was rare and sparsely used in warfare in this day and age— which meant that the drones and ordinances were in full display this evening.
The crash of missiles upon long broken concrete and soil wet with blood sounded like the ancient drums of war to the Taxiarch as he was dubbed. A few black and red ornithopters sped quickly towards #3 but even as their countless micro-rounds emptied towards him, not a single one would hit their mark. The American soldiers watched the man as if he was some sort of superhero, whisking past unimportant targets with a blank expression. Soon he would reach his target, a makeshift bunker lined with reinforced steel welded together— the singular entrance being split open before the insurgents within had anytime could react.
The Taxiarch would exit without a drop of blood on his figure, covered only by the dust and gunpowder diapered through the air. The exchange of gunfire continued even as he patiently made his way through the enemy lines and back to the village of quickly placed tents and his handler who patiently awaited his return. The Warhawk looked much like someone with that title would; a flat top buzzcut of silver hair, a grisly scar coming down from his left brow to his cheek, but he was not in military fatigues like those around him. Instead the handler wore a pristine suit with a small American flag pinned on his collar.
“Shit, we’ll be back in D.C ‘fore sunrise if I can get this dumb ass paperwork shit done. Fuckin’ should have a desk ass pencil pusher doin’ this shit for me.” Warhawk grumbled, not even taking the moment to await #3’s response as he closed his laptop and folded a small stack of documents up to tuck under his arm.
“Gather up yer things, I’ll do it on the way back. We’re ‘pposed to meet with that General in New York about this terrorist organization that keeps attacking the north border. S’go!” The air felt off, as if all the life had been sucked out of it. Perhaps it was the smell of death vapid on the wind, sticking to the back of your throat. There wasn’t much life left along the mangroves of the Carolinas, most people and animals fled upland into the mountains of Appalachia. But the handler of #7 was here for a very specific reason, and she knew that her unhinged monster was nearby as well. Close enough to monitor from a distance with the scope of her sniper, far enough to avoid direct interaction.
From the hip of her jeans she would pull an old school pager, checking to see if the number had responded yet— she did not. Embers of anger would begin to smolder in her stomach, sizzling against the sides of her ribs and swelling up with nausea. An unlucky mosquito would land on her shoulder just in time for that anger to be directed upon it, smacking it in an instant.
Mo Ye, as her alias was claimed, would angrily begin clicking the small letters on the pager, crunching them down with the as she stomped over to a tree that was bent by wind or water some time ago and began to climb it. The long rifle at her back would be unclipped from its harness and protective cloth before putting its stock to her shoulder and looking further towards the shoreline where #7 walked.
There the old bloated corpses of dolphins and hundreds of fish that had washed ashore would be seen as #7 slowly made her stride through the death-soaked sand until her pager would begin to vibrate. From her pocket it would dug out and it would read.
“𝗡𝗼 𝘁𝗲𝗿𝗿𝗼𝗿 𝗰𝗵𝗲𝗺 𝗽𝗹𝗮𝗻𝘁 𝗵𝗲𝗿𝗲.
𝗪𝗲 𝗻𝗲𝗲𝗱 𝘁𝗼 𝗴𝗲𝘁 𝗯𝗮𝗰𝗸.
𝗛𝗲𝗮𝗱𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝘁𝗼 𝗺𝗲𝗲𝘁 𝘀𝗶𝗯𝗹𝗶𝗻𝗴𝘀.
𝗕𝗲𝗵𝗮𝘃𝗲.”
”It is quieter than usual.” An imposing man standing nearly seven feet tall looked down from the top of a cathedral wall with #11 at his side. He was older, with his long white hair tied in a ponytail.
Kursk was a lot emptier than the capital, which meant the pair were able to move around a lot more freely. And freedom was quite rare, handler or number, though Dimitri didn’t mind the restriction placed upon him. Unlike some handlers, he rather enjoyed the company of this strange not-quite human girl. A Gyrfalcon would come swooping in along the horizon with a small leather contraption wrapped around its forebody. Within a small cylindrical tube a parcel was tightly wrapped.
”O. O. 9.2 7.9 0. Submarine departs from Silver Rock at 2100. #13 will be at the arrival location with Matriona.”
Dimitri would snap his fingers to create a small spark and from it the parchment would ignite until it was ash then dust. He would look to #11 with his dark green eyes and nod his head to her with a warm smile. From the side of the wall steps would extend out from the stone so they could casually make their way down.
”Come, Miya..” The words were as soft as they were cautious, but still he extended a gloved hand out to her so the handler may escort the number he was responsible for. The streets below had less than one hundred people wandering throughout them, it was a shell of its former self like most cities in this day and age. That wouldn’t stop Dimitri from offering passing merchants and tradesman a smile and nod as they quickly moved through the streets making their to the cliffs just outside the city.
Twelve thousand.
That was the number of Russian soldiers that remained along the border of what was once Finland. Destabilization rocked the smaller Eastern European countries worse than many others as grabs for power, along with the rich oil reserves nearby led the entirely of the east to become a war zone. Russia existed as a cruel iron fist that kept many of these former war powers in check, with many simply dispersing to simply be another territory for mercenaries and soldiers to occupy.
”Progress report,” Matriona coldly requested to a senior officer that stood at attention in front of her desk within the cold iron facility she and #13 had occupied for the defensive effort.
”Border should be secured by the end of the week!” His nerves wracked through the man’s body, not only because of the handler who worked alongside the state security force, but also because of the smaller younger creature that stood just behind Matriona.
”And the construction unit will be arriving soon for repairs, correct?” She asked with that same tone, dropping a pen to some paperwork in front of her to scribble something in idle as she waited for the soldier to respond.
”Yes ma’am, and the convoy to take you to the docks to meet with Dimitri will be here shortly!” He froze upon those words leaving his mouth, snapping his eyes closed at the thought of two of these creatures meeting at the same location. Terrifying, that’s how he would describe it.
Nonetheless he would open the tent and hold the forest green mesh wide open for the pair to be escorted to a transport of eight all-terrain vehicles parked near the dirt road attached to their encampment. Matriona would stand from her desk, tucking in the chair behind her before looking to #13 with a warm smile upon her face.
”Shall we go meet your older sister?” While most handlers and numbers would be out in the field, working undercover, or utilizing their resources to gain some territory or whatever else for the church— #8 would be in a white room filled surrounded by masked figures in lab coats. A singular door and a massive glass window for her handler and the large number of onlookers on the opposite side to watch safely.
“Element 118 stabilization has been successful. All researched may now leave the test chamber. 8 please remain inside until it has been successfully rendered dormant.” Her handler’s voice came from the number of loudspeakers hidden throughout the chamber, and upon their command, they would raise their hands up as they exited single-file to be hosed off in the wash room.
The element sat at the center of the room atop a long rectangular steel table, it floated on a carefully designed platform that hummed in rhythmic sound that echoed along the walls and filled the inside of your skull. Its appearance? A vantablack liquid that seemed to ripple at the reverberations emitted by the device underneath it.
Columbia, and South America as a greater— was slowly becoming the staging ground for most of the experimentation in this age. The land was rich in untapped resources, and the previously lower population areas were now abandoned for resistant life to flourish and retake the land that generations of humans worked to make suitable for industrialization. Now? Sparse buildings hidden in the vast jungles, hidden from prying eyes, and free to break laws and guidelines without a whisper from governments over your shoulder.
The number wasn’t here for their mind though, even if their input was accepted to some degree. A safe means to dispose of or repurpose the countless tests was needed, and after the nuclear explosion in southern Mexico it was deemed that accidents of that variety simply could not occur again. So she was left to do what she does best, and dispose of something volatile and dangerous. Once she was finished, her handler would activate the microphone from behind the glass a final time.
”Very good, now make your way to the wash room. Our plane to the states will be here in the morning so be sure to head directly to your quarters to pack.” Rome looked a lot like New York City in its prime. Of course the culture, and the clothes, and the language was different— but in truth the catholic church’s home city has become the new age melting pot due to the city’s security. And a lot of that safety was due to the very number and his handler that discretely walked through the canal district this evening.
”Mi dolcezza,” Sister Maria would start to speak just as a small drawbridge began to lower for the pair.
”the American Wing requested we leave the city for a short time.” The words came wet with the tinge of sulking in her tone. Maria didn’t hide her emotions very well, but outsiders might have seen it as performative. There was also a sense of urgency about it, and the nun stirred right where she stood— rocking on the heels of her shoes before letting out a loud and exasperated sigh. Then an open hand would be offered to #5, which would earn the ire of an onlooking official if they were to catch it.
”Let us try and get there early. I hear they might even let #1 leave the Vatican for once!” ”Ein schmerz im die hindern— pick up the fucking pace, god damn.” A tall, bad, and beautiful blonde woman spat in a mix of her broken native tongue.
”I’m going to dome one of these laborers if they don’t finish this silver shipment on time, we’re on a schedule!” She claps her hands directly in front of a sweaty German man with graying hair, and the look of defeat dripping from his face with each bead of sweat.
”#12, I’m going to have you send one to heaven if they’re not finished by five o’clock. “ This handler had the face of an angel but the heart birthed from hell’s deepest layer.
The state of Germany wasn’t destabilized to such a degree that there was no structure or governance, but out in the mines and quarries where precious minerals were still being harvested, oversight became a myth. That worked both, for, and against Aschen’s directive. Which she saw as grunt work, overseeing working men was a foreman’s job, not a handler’s. Truthfully the only reason the pair was sent here for the month was to babysit the shipments as pirates had raided a number of them in the past weeks— and the church had less and less faith in the German military with each passing year.
BOOM! Soil, stone, wood, all ruptured as a crater opened up in the earth where a small patch of trees kept insurgents hidden. Unfortunately, hardly anything can hide from the heavy ordinances dropped by Catholic death from above. Spain was, increasingly becoming one of the worst places to live. Failed countries were lawless no-man’s land, but there was hardly any need for large scale incursions within them. Mercenaries were easy to manipulate, they were motivated by money which the church had endless amounts of.
But even with Spain’s Catholic roots, in the years leading up to the world’s downfall their religious systems were slowly evolving into something of their own. The Pope couldn’t have that. So a lot of their resources have been spent here, even getting neighboring counties like Portugal involved to spark flames to surround and destroy it. Unfortunately for them, a lot of other rogue governments supported Spain in its fight, so the war raged on even to this day.
”Fourteen, we need to get to the border quickly and we’re probably not getting a transport. Please-please-please, I know you’re probably loving this.. but we need to get out of here.” It was a split decision in the moment, but she would need to comply either way— he was her handler after all. She changed her form, warping into a chimera of feline and all other sorts of animals to best suit a sprint far-far from the battlefield. The entire squad that had been sent with them was wiped out, not that #14 struggled on her own, but it wasn’t the time to revel in the gore. Their destination was a small hangar hidden at France’s southern border, hopefully that wasn’t being raided by the time they arrived.
“When are they supposed to be arriving sir?”
“They’re already here Lieutenant, did you expect them to be unspeakably grotesque?— No, they might’ve passed you on your way in.” The bald-headed general remained leaned against the wall with his blue military cap clasped closely to his chest.
His brows were tensed with his lower lip raised to tuck over the upper, he chewed on it anxiously with a quiet grumble within his throat. The man’s dark brown eyes would veer to the younger officer at his right, leaned similarly to almost emulate her superior. She would raise the brim of her own cap upwards to meet his eyes with her own, emerald in color they reflected the darkness in the general’s eyes. She could see it deeply in that deep void hidden within his sockets.
Worry. What did he know that she did not?