Chapter Three: The Hunt Begins
They ran through a world that didn’t want them alive.The forest tore at their bodies, thorns dragging through flesh already scorched and bruised. The roots snagged their feet like desperate hands trying to pull them under. Azazel’s shoulder hung limp from their last fall. Tempest’s ankle was swollen and lashing pain up her leg. But still—they ran.
The sky above had dimmed, and in its place: grey. Pale, almost blank.
“Don’t stop,” Azazel wheezed, dragging her arm. “Don’t—”
“I know,” she panted. “I know.”
They didn’t know where they were going. Only away.
The mechanical thrum of machines grew closer. Hovercrafts? Helicopters? They didn’t know the word for them—but they knew the sound of a hunt.
Searchlights cut through the canopy in sweeping cones. Voices barked orders over comms in sharp, lifeless tones.
“Target heading southwest. Thermals confirm two active entities. Alert Alpha Cell.”
The lights hit them—and the forest erupted in smoke.
Figures dropped from above, black armor gleaming, rifles raised.
Azazel threw himself sideways, body screaming in protest. A pulse of flame lashed from his hands, not enough to burn, but enough to stagger the closest agent.
Tempest screamed and flung a burst of wind, sending two more flying into the trees.
But there were too many.
One agent stepped forward, distinct from the rest—his armor thicker, his gait slower. Something clamped around his wrist like a gauntlet.
He lifted it—and fired.
A silver arc streaked through the air and latched onto Azazel’s neck.
The world collapsed. Azazel hit the ground hard, every muscle locking. His vision swam in static.
“Collar deployed. Vital signs stable. Begin containment—”
Tempest moved without thinking.
She didn’t scream. She didn’t rage.
She kissed the air.
The soldier nearest Azazel collapsed, gasping. His eyes rolled back, muscles twitching, blood vessels in his nose bursting. She moved again—faster than wind.
In a flash, she was over Azazel, tearing at the collar with trembling fingers. “Stay with me!” she hissed. She yanked the device off—and his body surged back to life with a choked gasp.
But it was too late.
They were surrounded. The soldiers reoriented. Weapons raised. Orders shouted. Tempest clutched Azazel to her, shielding his broken body with hers.
And then—
It came.
A ripple.
A coldness that crawled inside the skin.
The forest froze].
And one by one, the soldiers went silent.
The leader turned, visor locking on something that wasn’t there.
“Unseen anomaly approaching,” he muttered. “Execute Protocol—”
A scream tore through the comms.
Not human.
Something was inside the formation. Moving too fast to see. Too quiet to hear.
And then came the second ripple.
Azazel felt it like a weight on his spine. His fingers went numb. Tempest felt her breath leave her lungs like she’d been kissed by the grave.
“Two…” she whispered. “There’s two.”
Soldiers broke ranks. Screams scattered through the trees. One fired blindly into the forest. Another tried to run and was \dragged backward into the dark.
Something invisible passed by Azazel and Tempest—no sound, no shape.
Just intent].
Pure. Predatory. Designed to erase.
The remaining soldiers turned from the fugitives.
And began firing into the forest.
“Forget the targets! Engage the —ENGAGE THE NULL—”
The voices vanished beneath gunfire and something far worse.
Azazel forced himself to stand, shaking. “We have to go. Now.”
Tempest pulled him up.
The ground behind them burned with muzzle flashes and screams.
But ahead—only shadow.
They vanished into it.
Running.
Limping.
Bleeding.
But alive.
---
[center]Elsewhere…[/center]
“She broke the collar,” a voice said through static, cold and dry.
Another voice answered, almost bored: “Then they’re more dangerous than we calculated.”
“No,” the first corrected. “They’re not just dangerous. They’re exactly what we've been looking for ”
A pause.
Then:
“Radio Kangal and the Echo Units. And elevate their threat level to Anthem-Class.”
A final voice entered the channel—one low and masked with authority.
“We lost a team to two Nullborn. In the same sector.”
“That’s not a coincidence. Nullborn dont hunt in pairs.”
“...No,” the voice said. “They Dont.”
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