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The sky over sector 4 had the color of old blood and rusty iron.
At least what we called heaven. In truth it was only the Subpage of the gigantic plasma dome, which we are of the toxic waste of the Outer world separated – and at the same time served as a massive glass branch for the slums. I knew the sweat from the forehead with the heist and pulled the clamp the modified energy cell. A quiet sum rewarded my effort. “Look, it actually works,” I muttered and knocked lovingly on the rusty Housing. For the elite in the glittering upper sectors of the city, this was just garbage. Valueless scrap, which through the enormous disposal shafts down to us fell. But in my world one survived only if one from what others throw away, create new things. From the disassembled housing of an Enforcer drone, a few copper cables and activated carbon I had a first class water filter assembled. A precious, glass-clear drop fell into the collecting vessel. I did my finger and let the water on the earth of my greatest treasure Drop it. In the corner of my hidden shelter, illuminated by a flickering UV Tubes, standing three hollow rocket sleeves. They served me as planting vessels. I had collected for months organic waste, fermented it and my own, nutrient-rich fertilizers processed. The wage of this hard work was difficult to green canals: two pralle, bright red tomatoes and a buffalo more powerful Onions. Real fresh food was unpaid in Sector 4. The consortium fed us only with synthetic nutrient blocks that tasted after moist cardboard. A hard, rhythmic knock on my heavy steel door ripped me out of my Thoughts. Three times, one time. I relaxed right away. It was Betty. I pushed the heavy bolt back and pulled the door open. Betty squeezed on me past the small room. She looked just as exhausted as I was, her face was from Motor oil smeared and her wild curls had her with a piece of cable to a unordented dut tied together. She was my best friend, my Trade partner on the junks and the only one in this fucking sector, that I trusted my life. “I tell you, Jada, the guards at the control points are nervous today,” she said breathless and threw a heavy linen bag on my workshop table. It cried metallic. “I could have three intact frequency relays from the garbage presser sector save. They bring us enough credits on the black market for a week heating energy. Her eyes migrated to my plants. She punched out an awesome pea. ' all the spirits... you really did. I thought the toxins in Groundwater would destroy the roots.” “Not if you double bridge the filter cartridges,” I said proudly and one of her onions. “Here, take them for tonight. And don't say I never do anything good to you.” Betty smiled and carefully put the onion in her pocket as if it were pure gold. “You’re a fucking genius, Jada. If the consortium knows what you're doing down here from their waste, they would put you in the upper sectors' laboratories are replaced.’ “Or putting me on the wall for illegal cultivation,” I replied dry. The smile disappeared from Betty's face. “That’s not funny. The Purifiers are today on the hunt. I've seen patrols that usually never get so deep in sector 4. Full armor. Living scanner. They are looking for someone.” Even before I could answer, the sirens worshipped. The noise cut through mark and leg. It was not a normal shift change Alarm. It was the shrill, penetrating circle that a raid of military Elite unit announced. My heartbeat hammered against my ribs. The walls of my shelter vibrated under moaning heavy boots that are on the metal webs outside my room marched. “They are in our block”, whispered Betty, and naked panic flickered in her eyes up. “You have to get out of here,” I cried. I grabbed her on her shoulders and pushed her into towards the back wall where I had solved a rusty cover. Behind it a narrow ventilation shaft. “Go through the shaft. He leads directly to the Waste incineration plants. They're not looking. Take the relays!” “What about you?” Betty was strung, but I pushed her energetically into the tunnel. “I don’t fit with you. I'll take the southern exit. We meet at the old cistern tonight. Run, Betty!” Once she disappeared in the shaft, I pulled the cover back in front of the hole. I didn't torch long, grabbed my tool backpack and mine electric shock – a self-creation from a broken plasma gun and Car batteries – and open the front door. The corridor lighted in the bright red of emergency lighting. Screams halled through the Metal labyrinth of slums. Ozone and burned plastic were in the air. I ran. Left. Right. I knew every angle of this plane. I was almost on the edge the dark zone where the scanners of the consortium no longer worked. Ten feet. Suddenly, a massive shape in black high-tech setup was released from the Shadows. A purifier. Even before I could lift my shocker, the hard shaft of his Guns in the stomach pit. The air escaped my lungs. I broke gorging the cold grid floor together. A heavy boot came on my wrist, forced me to release the gun. “Rebellin secured,” the soldier’s mechanical voice reconciled Helmet. Two more guards showed up. One grabbed me rough on the hair and pulled my head back. I spit blood on his shiny armor, but he laughed just quiet. He pulled a flat, metallic device out of his belt – the ID scanner. You would register me, condemn me for theft and in the mines send. A death sentence on rats. The cold sensor was pressed hard against my neck, exactly where my implanted chip sat. The device piepte. But it wasn't the green confirmation signal.The scanner hit a grellent, pulsating warning tone. The display flickered blood red. The soldier who kept me stared. The atmosphere in the corridor changed unbeatable. The superiority of the guards was pure, naked panic. “What... what is this?” the purifier rang, holding the scanner. His hand trembled so strong that he almost dropped the device. “Love it before!” the other, but his voice almost broke. “Identity: Jada. Status: Slum resident. But... here's an override directive directly of the Oberkommando.” The soldier swallowed audible. He looked down at me like I was a time bomb. “Genetic Compatibility for Omega sector confirmed. Level: Absolutely. Sector Omega.The name alone was a myth, a ghost story that we are At night in the slums told us to grieve. A place deep under the earth, no one ever returned. The place where the monsters of the consortium bred were. “Sit them,” the commander whispered while he slowly step ahead of me as if I had a fatal disease. “Put them. Bring her right away down to the Apex. I wanted to scream, to fight, to call Betty, but a czech sounded as a needle in my neck. The world swept into more toxic Darkness, and the last thing I heard was the fearful whispers of my kidnappers.Three weeks later, the underground town no longer smelled like old copper and Despair. There was a new note in the damp air: the smell of fresh wood and hot sweat. The survivors from sector Seven and the outcasts of the Deep had begun to work together. Where once mistrust prevailed, now jointly repaired barricades and water treatment plants of the old Consortium technique put into operation. Raven Carter sat at a scratched iron table in the rear corner of the tavern Zum Rusty anchors. His right arm was in a dense, protective loop. The skin under it was covered by fine, star-shaped scars – a lasting souvenir the azilla glove, which trembles quietly during each change of weather. He felt the usual dissonance of the valley had disappeared. The song of the world, Elora's golden Consciousness, hummed again in a quiet, undisturbed cycle. The door of the tavern swung and Vesper entered. She wasn't wearing a heavy More fighting armours, but a simple leather jacket under which the
The old tower was no longer recognizable. The ruins were covered with black, pulsating veins that dug deep into the ground, like the roots a cancer ulcer. In the middle was the Alpha queen. She had both hands deep in the rock under the destroyed foundation. Red energy waves pulsated in concentric circles away from her while she tried the sleeping, golden Awareness of Elora from the core. Raven entered the square. His step was silent, but the presence of Project Azilla his right arm was not to be overlooked for the Queen. The purple antimatter Membrane sang a quiet, destructive song. The queen ripped his hands out of the stone. The ground begged. She slowly turned and the smile on her monstrous face was full of merciless Arrogance. “The Seeker,” she whispered, and her voice left the rain around her vaporize. “You wear the toy of the old architects. You really think, Piece of dead metal can stop the blood of the first generation?” Raven remained silent. He didn't waste en
Vesper hit the front line of hybrids like a comet strike. She braked their course, but threw themselves with the entire kinetic mass of their Body and its titanium arm in the densely crowded mass of meat and red light. Bones cracked, bare armored. The first three beasts were formally hurled through the air and further of their fellows rushed to the ground. But the shock effect lasted only briefly. The hybrids, driven by inexorable The alpha queen's will, quickly formed herself. A dozen creatures at the same time jumped on them, the jaw wide open, the claws faded. Vesper danced. It was a bloody, brutal dance born in the shadow of the Unterstadt and perfected by the unconditional will to survive. Your blade flashed in gray morning light, cut throats and pierced hydraulic Joints. Her titanium arm acted as an impenetrable shield and as a deadly hammer at the same time. She allowed the carmesine red light to flare in her own eyes, not to to subjugate, but to read the frequency
The way back through Aegis-Null was not a fight. The remaining Defending drones wiggle back as soon as they get the signature of Project Azilla registered. The machine, which once meant the end of the world, was now the only thing that stood between Novus Aetheria and the decline. When the enormous outer bulk of the plant opened again, the storm struck them against the death zone. The crawler still stood there, covered by black Dust, ready for return. On the way back to the valley, none of the two spoke a lot. Raven concentrated to keep the energy in its right arm in balance. Every time when his pulse in height, he felt like the antimatter membrane hungry at the Edges of his consciousness scratched. It was a constant fight for control. When they reached the edge of the valley, the rain had stopped, but a thicker, unnatural fog was above the forests. It smelled like burned wood and smelled blood. Raven stopped the crawler on a hill from which they took the entire valley
Raven's hand floated over the flowing, star-clear obsidian of the glove. The quiet sum of antimatter containment was almost like a song, a deceitful promise of absolute power and immediate salvation. A button, a mental command, and the alpha queen would not be more than a dark spot in the History of Novus Aetheria. But he looked at Vesper. He saw the scratches on her armor, the flickering red in their eyes, which fought against their own nature, and the involuntary courage of Woman who was willing to die for a world that she always like an outcast had been treated. Raven lowered his hand. He balled her to the fist. “I didn’t disassemble half of the city and died in sector Seven risked to choose the simple way down here,” he said, and his Voice was as cold and hard as the ice of the death zone outside. Vesper opened his eyes. “Are you crazy? Carter, this is our only chance! When the queen reaches the energy nodes of the valley, it becomes unstoppable. Do it!” “I am a see
The space behind the next gravel was of a completely different Nature as the cold, warrior corridors. It was a huge, semi-spherical Chamber, lined with white, immaculate material, gently from the inside lighted. In the middle of the chamber stood a podium of black onyx. Then the Azilla project rested. It wasn't a cannon. It wasn't a bomb. At first glance it looked like a artistically crafted glove made of liquid starlight and obsidian. The surface of the metal was not rigid; it moved slightly as if the object breathe. Raven slowly joined the podium. The air here was freezing and smelled like pure Ozone. “That’s her,” he whispered. ‘A weapon of pure antimatter and nanokinetic membranes. The architects have designed them to geometry to cut reality itself. She doesn't need a loom. She only needs the will of its carrier.’ Vesper remained in the shadow near the entrance. Your instinct, the animal side in her, she warned with every fiber of her being before the object on the
The cold in Bunker Theta was cutting. Without the thermodynamic inverter in the Center began the huge ice columns of the Ark slowly, almost imperceptibly warm up, but the hall was still ice cold. “The temperature rises by 0.1 degrees per minute,” Silas murmured, his face pale before cold, while
My breaths turned into dense white clouds as soon as we reach the threshold crossed by Bunker Theta. The temperature drop was so extreme that within seconds a fine Layer of roughness on the run of my kinetic rifle. The light of our portable torches cut through a darkness that felt almost massiv
The consortium had no time. They knew the ultimate weapon – and control over the whole world – would slide through the fingers if it did not immediately. “How long have we been until they break through?” I cried over the noise and ran to one of the holographic terminals. My fingers flew o
The journey through the night of the Ödland was devastating. The winding of the wind through the broken front panel cooled the interior of the cabin extreme. Kael had come down again, his face and his clothes were sprayed with ash-colored mud and the blue liquid of the drones, but he looked unh







