Taxor_the_First
Well-Known Member
Part 2
The Ranger wasted no time. He vaulted over the alloy barrier he’d been using as cover and kept relatively low as he moved, not entirely trusting his newfound concealment to be complete enough to hide him from the Vipers’ keen eyes. Glancing sideways, his pace quickened. “Muton and two Stun Lancers incoming,” he warned as he infiltrated the Viper’s holding point.
Samuel scowled. “We don’t have time for this!” he seethed, clipping one of the Viper’s frills with his rifle. “They’re delaying us at this point. We need to get moving.”
“What would you suggest?” Lester asked. “We can’t very well just ignore them and keep going, then we’ll have them behind us, and they’ll catch up if we need to stop at any point.”
The unsuppressed Viper felt a vibration behind it just as Arthur fired with his shotgun, killing the alien before it had a chance to react. The other Viper, seeing her comrade fall, hissed and fired at the Ranger. Her movements limited by the hail of magnetically-accelerated bullets flying her way, she was unable to aim the shot correctly, and it went wide.
It was at this point that the Muton and Stun Lancers came close enough to be considered a problem, the brutish alien bellowing as his Lancer assistants charged forward. Realizing that his position had become untenable, Arthur retreated. “They are grouping up in there,” he noted.
“Perfect,” Lester said. “Bonnie?”
“On it!” the Grenadier said, ceasing her suppression to load a HE grenade. She did not delay this time, firing the grenade directly into the bunker. The emplacement was blown outwards or destroyed as the force of the explosion pushed on the structures. The enemy found themselves with no cover.
And Judgement squad wasn’t about to let them find more. With a burst of bullets, Samuel eliminated the Muton, while Holly and Arthur took care of the Lancers. The remaining Viper was stunned when Alan’s Polarity Rifle struck her, resulting in no escape from Bonnie’s Coilgun.
There was a collective lowering of weapons. “No further enemies in close proximity,” Joy announced. “Moving ones, anyway.”
“Then we should get moving before that changes,” Lester instructed, pointing at the passage leading deeper in.
The squad moved quickly, somewhere between a jog and a run. And for once, banter was minimal – with Samuel completely focused on this mission, it would have felt like a mark of disrespect to him. So the normally chatty Holly, Bonnie, Alan… all were largely silent as the squad moved further in, the only sounds being their breathing and the clanking of their boots.
Oddly, the passage was entirely devoid of foes. When they emerged into what seemed to be some kind of furnace room, they were all even more surprised to find it empty as well.
“What do you think this is?” Bonnie asked, keeping her distance from the contained infernos.
“Some kind of thermal power generator?” Joy suggested.
“Unlikely,” Samara responded, shaking her head. “After all, what do you think ADVENT does with all those people when they’ve finished experimenting on them, or interrogating them?”
Samuel made a choking noise. “They could have already burned him, and I’d never know,” he whispered, genuinely horrified at the concept.
Lester glanced at Arthur, both of them knowing he could be right. “Then hope they haven’t,” was all the Specialist could say. “Come. We have dallied enough.”
Leaving the incinerator behind, they came into a short but wide hallway with doorways lining the walls. It too was devoid of defenses. “The hell is this?” Alan asked, diverting his run to peer in the window of one of the doors. “These the cells?”
“ADVENT hides their sensitive stuff at the centre of these kinds of facilities,” Samara stated. “We haven’t gone nearly far enough yet.”
“Astute, Ms. Vermaak,” Lucifer complimented. “You are correct. By my judging, we would only be about halfway inside.”
The Ambusher made a confused noise. “Two tables and chairs? Are they testing how humans date each other?”
Samuel lightly nudged him out of the way, taking a look for himself. “Interrogation rooms maybe,” he said, frowning. “Though there’s a distinct lack of the torture tools I would have been expecting.”
“Maybe they just ask nicely?”
The Russian scoffed. “Doubt it. Come on, we’re wasting time.”
Passing through the line of interrogation rooms, the group found themselves walking through a large door. Before them, the middle section of the facility stretched, prisoner cells running along the walls to an inner triangle-shaped holding area, which branched off in two other directions to the other side of the facility. The cells beside them had previously had alloy metal blast doors draped over the top, though as evidenced by the crumpling at the base of these doors, something had forced each and every one of them upwards again.
Samuel breathed in sharply. The occupants had then been executed. A single corpse lay in just about every cell in a pool of their own blood, evidently shot.
At the far end of the area, a large creature was straining against the final cell door, muscles pulling the plating upwards. The sheer strength of the beast crumpled the metal, though that could simply mean the blast doors weren’t as durable as they appeared. Red plated muscle adorned its body, connected by a pasty white ‘skin’ that seemed more akin to some kind of cartilage. With a roar, its breath misting in the air, it yanked upwards, not quite tearing the metal from the wall. A group of nearby ADVENT soldiers, an Officer, a Medic and a Trooper to be precise, all shifted uneasily at the display of force. A Sectoid Guru adorned in a sleek black armor chirped at the beast, and it continued to pull the door upwards.
The Sectoid turned around, noticing the squad. It chittered a warning, pointing at them, causing the ADVENT soldiers to whip around with guns ready. The large creature moved its attention from the cell it was trying to open, roaring when it spotted the XCOM forces even now spreading into the main cellblock.
“He’s a big one,” Holly noted, immediately shooting the Combat Medic and removing them from the fight.
“She,” Lucifer corrected. “A biological scan indicates that creature is a modified Muton female, bred to be strong and aggressive. I would describe in Newtons the force she can exert with her arms alone, but I would suggest her impact on the cells is description enough.”
“We can argue about whether it has a dick or not when it’s dead,” Bonnie snapped.
Lester frowned at the rather crass reprimand. “Bonnie’s right,” he admitted. “Samara, we need-“
“More contacts on approach,” Joy reported as a Muton and a Codex, attracted by the commotion, entered the room. The Muton crashed a fist against its chest while the Codex prepared to blink, likely behind them.
“Samara! Flashburst, now!” Lester barked.
The Juggernaut had already primed the device. With gritted teeth, she activated it, the intense light blinding most of the enemy organics and disorienting the Codex enough to prevent it using any psionic abilities. The brutish alien charging at them, however, seemed largely unaffected. It had probably been looking away at the time. Or had no eyes. It continued its inexorable charge, while the allies behind it clutched at their faces.
“Looks like we’re finishing this one the old fashioned way,” Bonnie cried as she spun up her Coilgun, unleashing a torrent of mag fire in the alien’s direction. The bullets embedded themselves in the alien’s flesh, but did not cause it to even flinch. “What the hell is this thing?”
Samuel managed to fire one burst of his rifle at the beast before it closed to what could be considered close range. With a roar, it slammed a fist downward, forcing him to dodge sideways. The alien cracked the stone floor with the sheer force of the blow, swiping sideways when its prey escaped it.
As it turned to attack anything else within its range, Arthur raised his shotgun, pointing it at the beast’s head. He pulled the trigger, the blast striking on target.
The bullets clattered to the floor, having merely bounced off. The creature swiped, forcing the Ranger to jump backwards. Tumulis whooped. “Good dodge!” he complimented his master. “No idea how it just shrugged that off, but good dodge!”
The Ranger wasted no time. He vaulted over the alloy barrier he’d been using as cover and kept relatively low as he moved, not entirely trusting his newfound concealment to be complete enough to hide him from the Vipers’ keen eyes. Glancing sideways, his pace quickened. “Muton and two Stun Lancers incoming,” he warned as he infiltrated the Viper’s holding point.
Samuel scowled. “We don’t have time for this!” he seethed, clipping one of the Viper’s frills with his rifle. “They’re delaying us at this point. We need to get moving.”
“What would you suggest?” Lester asked. “We can’t very well just ignore them and keep going, then we’ll have them behind us, and they’ll catch up if we need to stop at any point.”
The unsuppressed Viper felt a vibration behind it just as Arthur fired with his shotgun, killing the alien before it had a chance to react. The other Viper, seeing her comrade fall, hissed and fired at the Ranger. Her movements limited by the hail of magnetically-accelerated bullets flying her way, she was unable to aim the shot correctly, and it went wide.
It was at this point that the Muton and Stun Lancers came close enough to be considered a problem, the brutish alien bellowing as his Lancer assistants charged forward. Realizing that his position had become untenable, Arthur retreated. “They are grouping up in there,” he noted.
“Perfect,” Lester said. “Bonnie?”
“On it!” the Grenadier said, ceasing her suppression to load a HE grenade. She did not delay this time, firing the grenade directly into the bunker. The emplacement was blown outwards or destroyed as the force of the explosion pushed on the structures. The enemy found themselves with no cover.
And Judgement squad wasn’t about to let them find more. With a burst of bullets, Samuel eliminated the Muton, while Holly and Arthur took care of the Lancers. The remaining Viper was stunned when Alan’s Polarity Rifle struck her, resulting in no escape from Bonnie’s Coilgun.
There was a collective lowering of weapons. “No further enemies in close proximity,” Joy announced. “Moving ones, anyway.”
“Then we should get moving before that changes,” Lester instructed, pointing at the passage leading deeper in.
The squad moved quickly, somewhere between a jog and a run. And for once, banter was minimal – with Samuel completely focused on this mission, it would have felt like a mark of disrespect to him. So the normally chatty Holly, Bonnie, Alan… all were largely silent as the squad moved further in, the only sounds being their breathing and the clanking of their boots.
Oddly, the passage was entirely devoid of foes. When they emerged into what seemed to be some kind of furnace room, they were all even more surprised to find it empty as well.
“What do you think this is?” Bonnie asked, keeping her distance from the contained infernos.
“Some kind of thermal power generator?” Joy suggested.
“Unlikely,” Samara responded, shaking her head. “After all, what do you think ADVENT does with all those people when they’ve finished experimenting on them, or interrogating them?”
Samuel made a choking noise. “They could have already burned him, and I’d never know,” he whispered, genuinely horrified at the concept.
Lester glanced at Arthur, both of them knowing he could be right. “Then hope they haven’t,” was all the Specialist could say. “Come. We have dallied enough.”
Leaving the incinerator behind, they came into a short but wide hallway with doorways lining the walls. It too was devoid of defenses. “The hell is this?” Alan asked, diverting his run to peer in the window of one of the doors. “These the cells?”
“ADVENT hides their sensitive stuff at the centre of these kinds of facilities,” Samara stated. “We haven’t gone nearly far enough yet.”
“Astute, Ms. Vermaak,” Lucifer complimented. “You are correct. By my judging, we would only be about halfway inside.”
The Ambusher made a confused noise. “Two tables and chairs? Are they testing how humans date each other?”
Samuel lightly nudged him out of the way, taking a look for himself. “Interrogation rooms maybe,” he said, frowning. “Though there’s a distinct lack of the torture tools I would have been expecting.”
“Maybe they just ask nicely?”
The Russian scoffed. “Doubt it. Come on, we’re wasting time.”
Passing through the line of interrogation rooms, the group found themselves walking through a large door. Before them, the middle section of the facility stretched, prisoner cells running along the walls to an inner triangle-shaped holding area, which branched off in two other directions to the other side of the facility. The cells beside them had previously had alloy metal blast doors draped over the top, though as evidenced by the crumpling at the base of these doors, something had forced each and every one of them upwards again.
Samuel breathed in sharply. The occupants had then been executed. A single corpse lay in just about every cell in a pool of their own blood, evidently shot.
At the far end of the area, a large creature was straining against the final cell door, muscles pulling the plating upwards. The sheer strength of the beast crumpled the metal, though that could simply mean the blast doors weren’t as durable as they appeared. Red plated muscle adorned its body, connected by a pasty white ‘skin’ that seemed more akin to some kind of cartilage. With a roar, its breath misting in the air, it yanked upwards, not quite tearing the metal from the wall. A group of nearby ADVENT soldiers, an Officer, a Medic and a Trooper to be precise, all shifted uneasily at the display of force. A Sectoid Guru adorned in a sleek black armor chirped at the beast, and it continued to pull the door upwards.
The Sectoid turned around, noticing the squad. It chittered a warning, pointing at them, causing the ADVENT soldiers to whip around with guns ready. The large creature moved its attention from the cell it was trying to open, roaring when it spotted the XCOM forces even now spreading into the main cellblock.
“He’s a big one,” Holly noted, immediately shooting the Combat Medic and removing them from the fight.
“She,” Lucifer corrected. “A biological scan indicates that creature is a modified Muton female, bred to be strong and aggressive. I would describe in Newtons the force she can exert with her arms alone, but I would suggest her impact on the cells is description enough.”
“We can argue about whether it has a dick or not when it’s dead,” Bonnie snapped.
Lester frowned at the rather crass reprimand. “Bonnie’s right,” he admitted. “Samara, we need-“
“More contacts on approach,” Joy reported as a Muton and a Codex, attracted by the commotion, entered the room. The Muton crashed a fist against its chest while the Codex prepared to blink, likely behind them.
“Samara! Flashburst, now!” Lester barked.
The Juggernaut had already primed the device. With gritted teeth, she activated it, the intense light blinding most of the enemy organics and disorienting the Codex enough to prevent it using any psionic abilities. The brutish alien charging at them, however, seemed largely unaffected. It had probably been looking away at the time. Or had no eyes. It continued its inexorable charge, while the allies behind it clutched at their faces.
“Looks like we’re finishing this one the old fashioned way,” Bonnie cried as she spun up her Coilgun, unleashing a torrent of mag fire in the alien’s direction. The bullets embedded themselves in the alien’s flesh, but did not cause it to even flinch. “What the hell is this thing?”
Samuel managed to fire one burst of his rifle at the beast before it closed to what could be considered close range. With a roar, it slammed a fist downward, forcing him to dodge sideways. The alien cracked the stone floor with the sheer force of the blow, swiping sideways when its prey escaped it.
As it turned to attack anything else within its range, Arthur raised his shotgun, pointing it at the beast’s head. He pulled the trigger, the blast striking on target.
The bullets clattered to the floor, having merely bounced off. The creature swiped, forcing the Ranger to jump backwards. Tumulis whooped. “Good dodge!” he complimented his master. “No idea how it just shrugged that off, but good dodge!”