The Colony

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The Colony Page 7

by John M. Davis


  Normally Jack would have cursed such heavy rain. But given the circumstances, it provided him with additional cover. Which he welcomed with open arms.

  The lieutenant had shoved as many supplies into a satchel as possible. Military MRE packs, rifle magazines and a small com radio, though its housing appeared damaged.

  Zipping the satchel, Jack quickly placed it in the exact spot he'd pointed out to Renaldo. Forcing his body to stand as it fought against the weight of such rainfall.

  He was alert enough to see the clawed-hand crashing down, rolling a bit to his left as the Rynal soldier missed. A motion that left him down on a single knee and looking into the eyes of the demonic-like foe.

  It was the first time he'd come face to face with such a horror, and he found himself visually studying the beast.

  It was taller in stature than Jack, though its frame looked to be just as fleshy. Its body seemed almost webbed together, as if bare hide was intertwined around its vital areas. Appearing to be nothing but tendons wrapped in skin.

  And tendons could be severed, no matter the species.

  “I think you'll find that I'm a bit tougher to kill than innocent children.” Jack said firmly, standing to his feet slowly while unsheathing a combat blade from his leg holster.

  The Rynal soldier replied. Uttering a string of language that was not understandable, nor repeatable by a human tongue. Still, Jack knew that the beast understood the events to follow. Its elongated fingers crunching down a bit to further expose claws.

  The winged-demon was the first to strike, claws missing as it jumped down with tremendous force.

  The monster looked up to him, its eyes of fiery-black concentrating on the seasoned soldier a bit. Studying him. Its eyes eventually shifting down to the knife hand of Jack, who strengthened his grip of the blade.

  “See, where I'm from, a razor's edge will cut flesh from bone. Don't matter the species. And you can bet your ass,” the lieutenant said with a slight grin. “I've cut my fair share.”

  The demon adjusted the angle of his head a bit, tilting it as the green of its eyes continued to watch the soldier.

  Then, without a moment of warning, the Rynal soldier dashed in with extended claws, nearly digging into the marine's stomach.

  Had he been less-experienced, the thrust of claws would have caught him. Possibly even killed him. But Jack had seen his fair share.

  The first Sky War. The second. He'd even rubbed shoulders with the Sky Elites while hunting down murderous war criminals after it had all been said and done.

  And using his experience wisely, he created a deep slash across the demon's ribcage as it dashed in for him. Dripping blood of neon-green which eventually began pouring.

  “Be sure you get that wound looked at when you get to the gates of hell.” Lieutenant Strong commented, grinning a bit as the Rynal held its wound.

  His grin quickly turned to a grimace of pain, however, as a second Rynal drug its clawed-hand down the marine's back, crimson color immediately soaking the soldier's back.

  Jack had hit the ground, rolling in pain as he also realized a second demon had joined the fight. The odds no longer even.

  Quick enough, he narrowly escaped a thrashing curb stomp-style kick meant to end him – responding with a solid kick of his own to one of the Rynal, its leg buckling a bit. Then a second, as Jack began to work his way back upright.

  Even the smallest bones in his skull, however, jarred wildly as the second Rynal crushed him back to the ground with an authoritative backhand.

  With his vision blurred and what had instantly become a near-crippling headache, Jack was reluctant to stand again, opting instead to defend himself from his back.

  Pulling a rifle from its back, one of the Rynal uttered several harsh words, its language very cold and direct; as Jack remained crumpled to the ground awaiting his fate. Eventually closing his eyes.

  The lieutenant shook as the burst of ammunition sounded loudly, though it took a moment to register. It was Earth Defense gunfire.

  Quickly opening his eyes, Jack saw a Rynal falling victim to a single round, high-caliber. As the second turned with surprise, Ronaldo fired on it as well, though the monster evaded the shot. At least in terms of being fatal, the bullet merely clipping its side.

  The demon screamed in pain however, as Jack dashed to his feet and plunged man-made steel into the lower spine of the creature; brutally dragging the blade upward as the Rynal's screams turned to silence.

  “Run!” Ronaldo yelled, nearing his brother in arms.

  “Huh?” Jack asked, a ringing headache partially to blame.

  “RUN!” the sniper yelled once more, sprinting past his military superior.

  Oh Shit. Jack thought as the horizon was now filled with heavy rain and a small horde of Rynal, each of them closing in fast.

  The pain of a headache is enough to put even the best to rest. Amazingly, however, the adrenaline of death at the gates seems to always push us to our limits. As it did with Lieutenant Jack Strong as he began sprinting as though his life depended on it.

  Which it did.

  “How are you feeling?” Julia asked several hours later as Jack lay resting.

  “My head is still splitting...but I'm lucky to be alive.” he replied.

  “Yes you are, given everything that has taken place.” the young woman said, lifting his head up a bit to place a fresh rag across his forehead; the linen full of cold water and headache-killing ability, or so it seemed.

  “Sitrep!” the lieutenant yelled.

  “Well sir,” Renaldo replied, leaving the general to watch over the building's one and only entrance. “It isn't a good one.”

  “Give it to me.” Jack demanded.

  “Well alright, you asked,” the sniper replied as a disclaimer. “We're at war.”

  “What?” Jack asked, removing the rag from his head as he sat up quickly, preparing to stand.

  “I mean we're at war. The Earth Defense Force. Whatever those things are, we've dubbed them Rynal. Turns out the bastards are everywhere, not just here.”

  “What?” Jack asked, trying to process the new information. “How can that be?”

  “I dunno. There was a small radio in the satchel, but it's one-way. I've been listening in the best I can, but nobody is talking how. Just battle orders and casualties for the most part.” Renaldo said.

  Jack began to think about everything. The crew he had lost, the memories of home and his government as a whole. Then, pulling his sidearm, the lieutenant slowly aimed into the direction of the general.

  “Why have they not taken this building?” Jack asked, his pistol glued to the general.

  “What?”

  “I just saw with my own eyes what these things are capable of. They have the muscle and the weaponry to get to us. To get through my ship. So my question is, why haven't they broken through yet?” Jack demanded to know.

  “I, I don't know,” the general said, pausing to lift his hand in front of the gun's path. “Please, that's the truth. I wondered myself, but I don't have the answers lieutenant. Now please.” the general replied.

  “I do,” Julia added, stepping forward to the conversation. “At least I think I do.”

  Jack turned to her, pausing for a moment before finally lowering his sidearm and awaiting her explanation.

  “I think it is the children,” she admitted. “When the attacks began, they seemed to stay clear of the buildings where children were. I don't know why, I just know that when we brought them into this building they began to ignore us and decimated the remainder of the colony.”

  “And you said nothing of this?” the general asked loudly.

  “I didn't know. I thought it was my own mind thinking into things too deeply. I had no idea they were connected, and still don't.” Julia replied.

  “Makes perfect sense.” Jack replied.

  “How so lieutenant?” the general asked.

  “They used some serious hardware out there. Never seen anything
like it before, but I know it could have easily punched through the skiff when it was attached to our front door. Hell, even the front door for that matter. They also rerouted their punch shot into the air and hit my crew's skiff. No way they didn't have time to lock onto the skiff filled with kids.”

  “The kids are gone.” Renaldo stated clearly.

  “Yea, I'm aware,” Jack replied. “Means we're gonna have to haul ass pretty soon. It's only a matter of time before they hit us.”

  “Haul ass, there's nowhere to go?” the general replied in a questioning manner.

  “I'm a master of improvisation.” Jack replied.

  The giveaway was the scratching against such a battle-thick door. High pitched dragging of nails across human steel. Moments later, the door which had separated the group from the alien race outside – it began to pull away a bit. Brute force tugging against hold of large bolts.

  It took a few minutes, but finally the light of day, masked in rainfall of course, was easily seen through a large gap between the door and the frame surrounding it.

  Snap.

  The thick steel was finally broken from its hold, snapping apart from its hinges behind incredible force. The group watched as several of the succubus entered cautiously, each of them toting a weapon which resembled a human rifle. Though it was different at the ends, particularly the glowing end which faced away from the soldiers.

  Patting Renaldo on the shoulder for a job well done, Jack remained silent – as did the rest of the group.

  The sniper had pulled an LCD screen from one of the battle rifles and linked it to the LCD screen on his own weapon. Working as a two-way system,

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