The dust in the Afghan highlands didn’t care about international borders or high-level security clearances. It just got into everything—your lungs, your gears, and the tiny cracks in your soul.
Sergeant Leo Miller sat in the back of the armored transport, the rhythmic vibration of the heavy wheels against the gravel acting as a hypnotic drum. Across from him, the rest of his UN Security detail was catching sleep or checking gear. They were "Regulars"—good soldiers, but men who believed the world was as simple as the orders they were given.
"You're staring at it again, Leo," Corporal Hicks said, nodding toward the small, faded photograph tucked into the webbing of Leo’s tactical vest.
Leo didn't look up. He didn't have to. He knew every line of that photo. It was a picture of a girl with a fierce, gap-toothed grin, her arms wrapped around a younger, scrawnier version of himself. Maya. "Seven years today," Leo muttered, his voice raspy from the grit.
"The bombing in Frankfurt. I remember the brief," Hicks said, his voice softening. "She was a hell of a medic from what they say. Wrong place, wrong time."
"There’s no such thing as the wrong time," Leo said, finally stowing the photo. "Just the wrong people."
The transport lurched. Up front, the driver’s voice crackled over the internal comms. "Command, this is Convoy Alpha. We are three klicks from the drop zone. Cargo is stable. Requesting final clearance for the Icarus Project handover."
Leo looked at the two heavy, matte-black cases bolted to the center of the floor. They were told it was "Next-Gen Medical Cooling Units" for a rural hospital. But the cases didn't feel like medicine. They hummed. A low, subsonic thrum that made the hair on Leo’s arms stand up.
"Keep it tight, people," Leo ordered, checking his rifle’s safety. "We’re in the Red Zone now."
Suddenly, the world went white.
A sound like a lightning strike—crisp and deafening—shook the entire 12-ton vehicle. The transport didn't just stop; it was slammed sideways as if hit by a giant’s fist.
"IED!" Hicks screamed, but he was wrong.
Leo’s ears were ringing, a high-pitched whine that drowned out the shouting. He kicked the rear door release, but the hydraulics were dead. He had to use the manual override, throwing his shoulder into the heavy steel until it groaned open.
He tumbled out into the heat, rifle raised. But he didn't see insurgents. He didn't see smoke or fire.
He saw ghosts.
Three figures stood in the middle of the road. They didn't wear camouflage; they wore suits of dark, interlocking plates that shimmered like oil on water. Their helmets were seamless glass, glowing with a faint, predatory blue light.
"Contact! Nine o'clock!" Leo yelled, opening fire.
The bullets hit the center figure’s chest, but they didn't penetrate. They sparked and dropped, as if the air around the soldier was made of hardened diamond. The figure didn't even flinch. She—the frame was slender, the movement too graceful to be a man—simply raised a hand.
A pulse of distorted air erupted from her wrist-mounted gauntlet.
Hicks, who had just stepped out behind Leo, was caught in the blast. He didn't just fall; he was thrown twenty feet backward, his armor shattered.
"Fall back! Get behind the hull!" Leo commanded, his heart hammering against his ribs.
He watched as his unit, men he had served with for three years, were picked apart with terrifying precision. The attackers didn't use tactics Leo recognized. They moved with a synchronized, mechanical speed, flickering in and out of sight as their cloaking tech struggled with the dust.
The lead female assassin stepped toward the transport. She moved with a familiar gait—a slight tilt of the head, a specific way of bracing her weight.
Leo’s breath hitched. No. It's the shock. It's the heat.
He lunged forward, discarding his empty rifle and drawing his combat knife. He tackled her, the weight of her high-tech armor feeling like cold stone. They rolled in the dirt, Leo using every ounce of his "regular" training to pin her down. He managed to get a grip on the side of her seamless helmet.
With a roar of desperate strength, he slammed his combat knife into the seal of the mask and wrenched it upward.
The helmet hissed, pressurized air venting out. The faceplate fell away.
Leo froze. His blood turned to ice.
The face was pale, crisscrossed with faint, glowing blue veins that pulsed beneath the skin. Her eyes weren't brown anymore—they were a flat, synthetic silver. But the bone structure, the scar on the chin from a childhood fall, the shape of the brow... it was unmistakable.
"Maya?" Leo whispered, his voice breaking. "Maya, you're alive?"
The woman didn't blink. There was no recognition. No love. No soul.
"Objective secured," she said. Her voice was her own, but layered with a digital metallic hum.
She slammed a palm into Leo’s chest. A massive electric discharge surged through his body, smelling of ozone and burning cloth. As Leo’s vision began to fade into black, he saw his sister pick up the Icarus cases with effortless, superhuman strength.
She didn't look back at him. She didn't even check to see if he was breathing.
The last thing Leo saw before the darkness took him was a black helicopter, silent as a grave, descending from the clouds to reclaim its prize.
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