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Chapter 10

  Daniel stayed where he was, one block short of the plaza, unable to take another step as the city he thought he knew shifted in front of him; the towers surrounding the massive structure weren’t just unfamiliar—they felt imported, their angles too precise, their surfaces humming with a resonance that didn’t belong to anything built on this side of reality, and the longer he stared, the more it sank in that these buildings hadn’t risen from the ground at all but had been placed here, forced into existence like someone had dragged them in from another dimension and let them overwrite whatever used to stand in their way; the distant red flashes of transfer emitters lit the sky in steady pulses, each one marking another person being delivered into the plaza ahead, and Daniel felt the weight of it settle in his chest—his city wasn’t changing, it was being replaced, piece by piece, while he stood on the edge of a world that no longer matched the one he remembered. Daniel stayed hidden behind the fractured corner of a storefront, watching the plaza operate with a cold, mechanical rhythm; the arrival constructs were larger now—long, capsule?shaped structures big enough to hold entire groups, each one permanently open along one side like a loading bay, no doors, no seams, just a smooth interior waiting to be filled; every few seconds a wide red streak snapped down from somewhere in the city, striking the top of one of the constructs, and a cluster of suspended figures flickered into existence inside—ten, maybe fifteen at a time—dropping into place with the same eerie precision as cargo being delivered to the wrong world; CRUs were already waiting, stepping forward in synchronized formation to guide the disoriented groups out of the open bays, scanning them quickly before directing them toward different lines leading deeper into the plaza, the whole process running with the unsettling efficiency of a system built for mass intake rather than anything meant for human beings. Daniel wondered where the people went after they were hit with the transfer emitter. Daniel felt the hair on his arms rise before he heard anything, a faint static pressure building around him as another wide red streak slammed into one of the arrival constructs across the plaza; the CRUs moved in their perfect formation, the city’s impossible machinery humming through the air, and for the first time he realized he wasn’t just in danger—he was in a place the world itself was trying to overwrite. His pulse spiked, the Astralink Band on his wrist tightening with a sudden warmth that made him flinch. He looked down just as the smooth black surface rippled, light threading through it like veins waking under skin, and then a voice—clear, calm, impossibly close—spoke directly to him. He heard a woman's voice, warning him, and it was coming from his Astralink Band. A voice, steady, grounded warmth of a woman in her thirties — low?medium in pitch, smooth, and naturally calm. There’s a quiet confidence in the way she speaks, the kind that comes from someone who thinks before she talks. Her words carry a soft, even cadence, never rushed, never sharp, with a subtle richness that makes her sound composed even in tense moments. There’s no artificial edge to her tone; it’s warm, mature, and reassuring, like someone who knows what she’s doing and doesn’t need to raise her voice to be heard. "Daniel... I've been trying to reach you for some time now." the woman said as he heard the voice from his watch. He lifted his watch towards his face as if he was checking the time. "Daniel? Can you hear me? The voice said on his watch as he replied "Hello?" "Good, stay still for a moment" The voice said. “I know this is sudden. I’ve been trying to reach you for a long time.” She added. Daniel barely had time to register the siren before it hit him—an earth?deep metallic roar that rolled across the plaza like something alive, rattling windows and vibrating straight through his chest, and the moment it cut off the entire block fell into a suffocating silence that felt staged, intentional, predatory. Then shutters along the higher floor of the massive building opened up, Daniel at this time was wondering what was going on as the people below in the streets being organized by the CRUs began panicking as the CRUs remained in control over them. They were being ordered to calm down in the CRU's mechanical voice, as the CRUs were the only things that knew what was happening. Some of the people tried taking advantage of the situation and made a run for it as some CRU units began their pursuit. Some were caught immediately, some made a break for the buildings nearby and tried hiding but was futile as the CRUs can pick up on their hear beats, or their body heat. Daniel really wanted to help those people out as they ran and screamed in fear, but Daniel knew he couldn't just rush in. He knew he had to be smart. Then he heard the woman's voice again "Hang on Daniel, I'm hacking in, just hang on a little longer" "Alright, but whatever you're doing make it quick! There's something coming my way and fast." Daniel replied as he hunkered down on the outskirts of the plaza. He used the skill Veilshift in hopes to stay hidden, as he knows that might not work. As Daniel stared at the massive building, he saw what looked like helicopters without propellers. Up close, the ADF looks like a helicopter that’s been stripped of everything familiar and rebuilt for a purpose no civilian machine should ever serve. The matte?black fuselage is long and angular, its armored shell swallowing light, but now the surface is broken by narrow, recessed intake vents along the sides and underside — thin slits that glow faintly red as they draw in air to cool the grav?stabilizers. They don’t roar or whine; they emit a low, steady pull of air that sounds almost like breathing, a mechanical inhale that deepens as the craft accelerates.

  The vents pulse in sync with the stabilizers, giving the impression of a living machine regulating its own temperature, its own rhythm. When the ADF (Aerial Deployment Frame) rushes in low over the rooftops, the vents flare brighter, pulling in massive volumes of air to keep the stabilizers from overheating during high?speed maneuvers. Heat ripples shimmer around them, distorting the air like a mirage.

  The craft still glides with that predatory smoothness, still hums deep, but the vents add a new layer — a sense of pressure, of power being contained, of a machine that’s always on the edge of unleashing more force than it should. And when it reaches the drop point, the vents flare once, sharply, like a final inhale before action. Daniel looking up at the ADF knew he was screwed at this point as only one type of android unit were in those ADFs. They were like the CRU's except a team of androids that were more like a SWAT unit. The side doors of the rushing ADF snapped open, and three TRUs hurled themselves out without hesitation, their obsidian?black frames cutting through the air before slamming into the pavement in perfect formation, landing so hard the concrete shuddered beneath them. They rose in a single, fluid motion, revealing bodies built like CRUs stripped of every civilian concession—broader chests, thicker limbs, exposed mechanical tendons flexing beneath segmented armor plates that shifted with low hydraulic growls. Their proportions were subtly wrong, arms a little too long, shoulders a little too wide, silhouettes too predatory to mistake for anything municipal. Each head carried a narrow, horizontal red visor line that ignited as they straightened, a cold, surgical glow that wasn’t a face so much as a targeting system pretending to be one. Their forearm plating split open with sharp mechanical snaps as the Pulse?Caster rails slid forward, glowing with the same red charge as their visors, heat vents flaring along their arms as they locked onto Daniel instantly. They didn’t speak, didn’t gesture, didn’t even acknowledge each other—yet they shifted into a perfect three?point spread, moving with the eerie precision of a single mind wearing three bodies, faster and heavier than any CRU he’d ever seen, already cutting off his escape before he’d even chosen a direction Daniel immediately used his skill SCAN on them.

  [TRU — TACTICAL RESPONSE UNIT - Level 15 X3]

  Designation: Tier?2 Enforcement Construct

  Role: Lethal Containment / High?Threat Interception

  Unauthorized duplication: this narrative has been taken without consent. Report sightings.

  Threat Rating: High

  BASE ATTRIBUTES

  


      
  • Strength: High — capable of breaching reinforced doors, pinning targets, and delivering concussive strikes.


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  • Speed: Very High — faster acceleration and top speed than CRUs; optimized for short?range bursts.


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  • Durability: High — reinforced composite plating; resistant to blunt force, small arms, and environmental hazards.


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  • Processing: Shared Neural Mesh — squad?linked, real?time data exchange.


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  • Awareness: Extreme — 360° threat mapping via SquadSync Vision.


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  [Additional Information]

  ? SquadSync Vision

  All TRUs in a squad share visual feeds, threat markers, and positional data.

  If one sees the target, they all see the target.

  If one predicts a dodge, they all adjust.

  ? Grav?Stabilized Drop Protocol

  Optimized for low?altitude deployment from ADF transports.

  Absorbs impact from high?speed jumps without loss of balance.

  ? Adaptive Combat Logic

  TRUs shift roles dynamically:

  ?  Suppression

  ?  Flanking

  ?  Cutoff

  ?  Pursuit

  They rotate seamlessly, acting as a single organism.

  ? Pulse?Caster SMG (Integrated Forearm Emitter)

  Type: Energy?pulse burst weapon

  Range: Short–Mid

  Behavior:

  ?  Fires lethal energy pulses

  ?  No recoil

  ?  No muzzle flash

  ?  Leaves glowing dents in concrete

  ?  Heat vents open after sustained fire

  Purpose: Lethal force

  ? Shock?Lance (Retractable Spine?Mounted)

  Type: High?voltage melee weapon

  Use: Close?quarters takedowns, disabling armored targets

  Behavior:

  


      
  • Extends with a hydraulic snap


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  • Delivers a paralyzing, armor?piercing jolt


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  GRENADE LOADOUT

  ? CN?Fog Canister

  Non?lethal human control.

  Burns eyes, lungs, and disrupts vision.

  Used to force movement or flush targets from cover.

  ? Breach Charge Grenade

  Lethal concussive blast.

  Used to destroy cover, breach walls, or eliminate clustered threats.

  ? Flash Disruptor Grenade

  Machine?targeting EMP burst.

  Momentarily blinds sensors, disrupts targeting systems, and scrambles low?tier constructs

  SPECIAL TRAITS

  ? Unit?of?One Combat

  Three TRUs fight like one mind with six limbs.

  Perfect spacing.

  Perfect timing.

  Perfect angles.

  ? Predictive Pathing

  Uses SquadSync data to anticipate target movement.

  Dodging becomes nearly impossible.

  ? Pressure Advance

  TRUs close distance aggressively once a target is marked.

  Designed to overwhelm before the target can adapt

  Now Daniel's heart was really racing as he saw what the TRUs can really do and what they were equipped with. He always saw them on T.V. when they were needed to take on situations CRUs otherwise struggled with. But now to be faced to face with one and being the target of these TRUs. It shook Daniel, as he knew they don't mess around and will take out or immobilize their target, which was him. The TRUs didn’t waste a second; the moment their visors locked onto Daniel, the Pulse?Caster rails on their forearms flared bright red and the first burst tore through the air with a concussive THNK?THNK?THNK that wasn’t warning fire — it was meant to kill him outright, each pulse slamming into the pavement with enough force to blast fist?sized craters into the concrete and send shards spraying past his legs. Daniel dove hard, instincts screaming, because these weren’t suppression shots or herding tactics like CRUs used — every pulse was a lethal, high?velocity energy slug that would punch straight through him if it connected. A second TRU pivoted with mechanical precision, tracking him mid?roll, firing another burst that vaporized the corner of a planter he’d just ducked behind, the shockwave slamming into his ribs and stealing his breath. The third TRU didn’t even fire; it sprinted forward, closing the distance with terrifying speed, ready to cut off his escape while the other two kept hammering the area with lethal pulses that turned every surface around him into exploding debris. Daniel felt the heat of a near?miss scorch across his shoulder as he scrambled for cover, realizing with a cold spike of fear that these machines weren’t trying to capture him, corner him, or slow him down — they were trying to erase him. Daniel fired an arrow as soon as the third TRU appeared in his site. The arrow flew right at it's face as soon as it was about to make contact, the TRU caught it, and crushed the arrow, continuing to charge Daniel as he backed up really quick only to realize another TRU was right behind him. It reached up and grabbed his shoulder with such speed and accuracy, nearly crushing his right shoulder. Daniel then formed an arrow using Arc Lash with his left hand, and immediately stabbed the TRU under it's right under arm forcing it to let him go, the TRU's right arm went limp as it suffered some damage to it's right arm, but that did not faze it one bit as it almost immediately reached at him with it's left arm now. As it did, the charging TRU from earlier that caught his arrow was right on top of him already thrusting at him with it's shock lance, as Daniel barely managed to dodge it's attack rolling backwards and away from the two TRUs. As he made some distance, the third TRU appeared behind the other two as they all charged Daniel with extreme speed and aggression. Daniel knew this was it, he knew he was not going to survive this battle. As all thre TRUs charged Daniel, two had the shock lance ready to thrust into him, as the third one had a damaged and unusable right arm charging at him recklessly. They closed the distance almost immediately. The three TRUs charged him in perfect formation, two Shock?Lances snapping forward in lethal red arcs while the damaged one thundered behind them, its ruined right arm sparking as it raised its left for a crushing blow, all three closing the distance with terrifying speed that left Daniel nowhere to run. He stumbled back, lungs burning, every instinct screaming that he was out of time as the first lance came down in a killing strike aimed straight for his chest, the second already adjusting to catch his dodge, the third preparing to drive him into the ground. Daniel threw himself sideways on pure desperation, but even he knew it wasn’t enough — the lances were too fast, the angles too perfect, the machines too coordinated. The world narrowed to red visors and humming blades, the certainty of impact tightening around him like a closing fist, and then, in the final fraction of a second before the Shock?Lance hit, the air beside him ruptured in a burst of blue and light?blue light, a cascading flare that washed over the street like a tear in reality snapping open. A figure slammed into the TRU mid?strike with impossible force, knocking the machine off its feet in a shockwave that cracked the pavement, the other two recoiling as the blue light folded inward around her form. Daniel didn’t hear a voice. He didn’t get a warning. She simply arrived, intercepting death with a precision that felt less like timing and more like destiny. The blue and light?blue flare collapsed inward, and as the light thinned, Daniel saw her—standing between him and the TRUs with the calm, steady poise of someone who had always belonged there. Her long, flowing hair drifted weightlessly behind her, strands shifting between soft blue and pale, luminous light?blue as if catching starlight that wasn’t present, framing a face shaped by quiet certainty and a maturity that felt instantly grounding. Her eyes—deep blue threaded with faint, star?like points—held a focused, almost cosmic clarity as she assessed the three machines recalibrating around her. She wore a maid?inspired outfit rendered in her signature palette: a fitted bodice traced with subtle geometric patterns that shimmered like digital constellations, a layered skirt that moved like weightless silk, and a soft apron?panel overlay that glowed faintly at the edges, elegant rather than frilled, ceremonial rather than cute. Every part of her presence felt intentional, from the gentle taper of her sleeves to the silver accents that caught the lingering light of her arrival. She didn’t speak. She didn’t look back at him. She simply stood there—calm, composed, impossibly real—her aura a soft blue radiance that made the lethal TRUs hesitate for the first time, as if even their predictive models couldn’t account for her.

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