Chapter 1
As the sun fell on New York, Louis decided to take another trip through the streets. It had been a slow day, only a single robbery at the bank, and the robber'd been shot by a vigilante before he could even get there. He had a badge and he was going to make use of it, somehow.
Ever since they'd taken the island from the Shifters, the newly-established UMC government had found it difficult to keep order in a hostile city. They had brought in an entire battalion of soldiers, not to mention the hundreds of police, Louis included, that had to be shoved as quickly through training as possible and sent out onto the streets. The first week he could hardly hold his gun straight; but he'd gotten used to his lot in life. As these thoughts passed through his mind he turned on his motorbike, heading towards the docks.
Another officer had shown him the place about a month ago, and Louis had grown attached to it; stopping by whenever he passed through the area. As he pulled up and stepped off the bike two shady looking characters quickly tried to hide something in their pockets. Louis drew his handgun and walked up to them, and casually pointed it towards them.
"Hands up, boys."
The two complied, sweat dripping down their faces. Louis reached inside the fat one's pocket and pulled out a bag, filled with pills. Louis sighed to himself; this was his least favorite part of the job.
He quickly pulled the trigger, putting a bullet in the skull of each. Martial law was martial law, and during that time any illegal act was considered treason. Treason got the death penalty.
He holstered the pistol and walked out to the edge of the dock and breathed in the air. Freshest in Manhattan, though that wasn't saying much considering the state of affairs at the moment. A few seagulls were feasting on someone's corpse further out to sea. He couldn't tell whose, and didn't honestly care. He didn't know him, and unless there was a complaint it wasn't his problem. All he wanted to do was stand there until the sun went down.
As he tried to calm himself, he was caught off guard as a tremor shot through the docks. He grabbed a pillar and held on as tightly as he could, knowing the shaking would stop in a moment; but it didn't stop, rather it shook more violently with each passing second, as if something was approaching. Louis thought that was impossible, but was proved wrong quickly as something rose from the water.
It was massive, twice the size of the baseball stadium, if not larger and bristling with dozens of... weapons? Yes, weapons. Louis had to take a moment to come to grips with this, before he could take the only logical action and turn to run. But he couldn't run, all he could do was stare in disbelief as the ship began to open fire, and buildings began to fall. Drones flew out from it, strafing the streets and mowing down droves of civilians attempting to flee to their homes. Several larger ships flew out from their parent ship and fanned out over the city. Louis ran from his spot in an attempt to reach his motorbike, but it ended up directly in the landing zone of the ship. The officer could only stare in disbelief as it opened up, dozens of soldiers filing out, randomly gunning down any civilians they ran across. One of them looked the wrong way and spotted Louis staring, mouth agape at the raid.
The faceless man shouldered his rifle, and pulled the trigger; lead flowed from its barrel like water, but quickly turned to mist at that range. A single lucky bullet grazed Louis in the stomach, dropping him. The officer pulled his handgun out and took a shot, but it went wide and bounced off the ship with a pinging noise. Seeing the hopelessness of the situation Louis fled into a nearby alley, aware that the soldier was chasing him.
He turned a few sharp corners, hoping that his knowledge of the streets would outsmart the soldier; he jumped over a fence or two even, before stopping to catch his breath on the stoop of an abandoned apartment building. Suddenly he heard footsteps. He drew his gun and fired off a round, barely missing a sweet old lady as she came around the corner; scared half to death she tried to run back in the other direction. Louis jumped to his feet and ran to her, grabbing her by the arm before she could move into someone else's line of fire.
"Ma'am," he began, "whatever's going on right now is too dangerous for you to be outside."
"Oh, don't worrry about me." The old woman replied. "I'm tough as nails, I'm not afraid of a few soldiers."
For the sake of the woman's well-being Louis pressed the fact that she should be inside.
"No, ma'am, I can't let you do that. We need to get you inside before you get hurt. This is a war zone."
As he dragged her along she began to protest with increased agitation.
"B-but my home is that way! Can't we at least head that way?"
"Too dangerous, there's a ship full of troops there."
"Please, sir, I'm begging you! My cat won't survive without me!"
"They're not here for your cats, ma'am, I'm sure it'll be fine."
The argument continued on, and with each sentence something changed in the old woman. Her voice grew tense, strong... deep. Suddenly it wasn't a woman speaking, but a man. Louis took the time to turn around and ask the woman if she smoked when he suddenly realized he was dragging one of the faceless soldiers. The man's helmet disguised all emotion as he cast off Louis' arm and grabbed his throat, lifting him to the air and backing him into a wall. The soldier drew a knife from several holsters on his belt. He put it to Louis' throat, and whispered to him "Between you and me, there really was a cat. When I get back to my squad, I'll make sure we name it after you. I like to be able to identify my food."
The soldier laughed a terrifying, merciless cackle as he pushed the knife forward, the cackle becoming almost a ringing in Louis' ears. Wait. In fact, it was a ringing. The dream stopped suddenly, and Louis shot up from his bed in a cold sweat. Two years and he still remembered every detail vividly from that horrible day. He buried his face deep into a pillow, and shouted curses as loud as he could into it.
Louis threw off the covers and headed to the shower. As he stood, he went over every detail in his mind of that day, over and over. He was lucky to be alive, lucky the first shot from that ship didn't hit a building by him. He'd read the reports, they all had. A 93% fatality rate for all armed personnel in Manhattan. Another 5% gone insane from PTSD. The last 2% resigned as soon as they got home, Louis included.
But now word had come out, the UMC was low on troops. Not only that, but they had reached the "climax" of the war and they needed all the help they could get. The new deal for volunteering was a steal, you were shipped out for 6 months, and got paid a fortune good enough to buy yourself a house in New Zealand. The only place that didn't even have to worry about radiation, the real estate value there was outrageous. And Louis needed a better home than the one he had.
The night before at the bar he and his friends had decided - they would sign up, go through this tour together, and come out of it millionaires. It would be easy, most of the guys at the bar had gone through tour without even seeing action, so their chances were just as good, right? Louis caught himself arguing with his own mind, and threw on a set of clothes. A car had been honking outside for the last 20 minutes, and he could hear the voice of his friend Jack over the horn telling him to hurry up. He rushed out the door, desperate to get to his friends; they always proved enough of a distraction to escape the dreams.