The patrol began before dawn.
Not because dawn mattered anymore, but because schedules did.
Aiden stood inside the forward operations hub as Fire Team Delta-Seven assembled around him, helts clipped, weapons checked, HUDs syncing with local command.
The old transit station slled like oil, concrete dust, and recycled air.
Maps scrolled across wall panels borough grids subdivided into color-coded blocks, each one pulsing faintly as data refreshed.
This was his team.
Five recruits.
No veterans.
No transfers.
Command had decided that fresh minds bent easier to rigid systems.
Aiden activated his squad channel.
"Delta-Seven, status check."
One by one, acknowledgnts chid.
"Rook, green."
"Vasquez, ready."
"Chen, synced."
"Malik, all set."
"Kellan, standing by."
They clustered loosely around him, watching him more than the maps.
Not because he outranked them by much but because he was the only one whose posture looked like it belonged here.
Aiden keyed the exit clearance.
"Route Alpha-Three. Upper Grid periter sweep. This isn’t a combat patrol. That doesn’t an it’s safe. We walk it exactly the way it’s logged. No shortcuts. No curiosity."
No one answered right away.
Then Malik muttered, "Copy," and the others followed.
The blast doors slid open.
Noise poured in.
Not explosions not yet but the layered sound of a city refusing to stop.
Generators thudded sowhere underground.
Transport rails screeched as armored trams moved through sealed corridors.
Drones buzzed overhead in looping, chanical patterns.
Sowhere far away, sothing detonated, but the sound was swallowed by distance and concrete.
They stepped into a street that used to be wide enough for traffic and argunts.
Now it was two narrow lanes boxed in by concrete barriers stacked higher than a truck.
Steel sh stretched between buildings overhead, threaded with sensors and charges.
Rook tilted his head back, staring up.
"Jesus," he said quietly. "Feels like the whole place is wrapped in a cage."
Malik didn’t look up. "It is. We’re walking inside it."
Aiden raised his hand and they stopped automatically.
That reflex was good. It ant training had stuck.
A civilian convoy rolled past in the adjacent corridor three low-profile electric carts loaded with sealed containers, escorted by municipal security.
The civilians inside sat hunched forward, eyes down, hands tight on straps.
No one waved. No one acknowledged the soldiers.
Interaction was discouraged.
Familiarity led to expectation. Expectation led to panic.
Once the convoy passed, Aiden lowered his hand.
They moved.
The Upper Grid was deceptively calm.
That was by design.
The real fighting happened farther out, where the defense layers absorbed pressure and bled it away.
Manhattan was a spine.
You didn’t let the spine take the hit.
As they walked, Chen kept glancing at his HUD, fingers twitching as data scrolled.
"Movent density’s high for this hour," he said. "Civ traffic’s up twelve percent from yesterday."
"Because yesterday they shelled Queens," Vasquez replied. "People move away from noise."
"And toward us," Rook said.
Aiden nodded. "Which is why this zone stays boring. Boring is intentional."
They passed an intersection where the barricades opened briefly, letting civilian foot traffic cross.
No walls. No visible guns. Just markings on the pavent and caras tracking everything that moved.
Kellan slowed, frowning. "Why no hard barriers here?"
Aiden didn’t break stride. "Because aliens map reactions. You change the shape of the street too often, you tell them where you’re nervous."
Kellan absorbed that, then shook his head slightly. "So we pretend it’s normal."
"We make it predictable," Aiden said. "There’s a difference."
A shadow slid across the street.
They all felt it before they saw it.
Aiden’s body tightened, breath held without conscious thought.
Above them, slipping between buildings, an alien reconnaissance drone passed low and slow.
Its surface mirrored the city lights, bending them strangely, like the thing was never fully solid.
Rook whispered, "Why isn’t anyone firing?"
"Because it’s bait," Malik said.
The drone didn’t stop. Didn’t engage. Just watched, recorded, and moved on.
When it was gone, Vasquez let out a breath she’d been holding too long. "I hate that thing."
"So do they," Aiden said. "That’s why they send it."
They reached a civilian interface zone a controlled overlap between military patrol space and human movent.
Reinforced glass panels separated a narrow market strip from the street.
People traded ration credits, battery packs, dical supplies.
Ard guards stood every ten ters, eyes scanning for tension instead of threats.
Aiden signaled a halt. "Hold periter. Eyes outward."
A woman approached the barrier, tablet raised.
Malik stepped forward, scanned her clearance. It pinged green.
She didn’t thank him.
She didn’t look at him at all.
She moved fast, like the glass might disappear if she lingered.
Kellan shifted uncomfortably. "Feels like we’re herding livestock."
Aiden turned his head slightly. "Careful."
"I didn’t an—"
"I know what you ant," Aiden said quietly. "And that way of thinking gets people killed."
Kellan swallowed. "Sir, I just—none of this feels right."
"No," Aiden agreed. "It feels necessary."
They moved on.
The city showed its wounds in pieces. A building cut clean in half, deliberately collapsed to deny vertical access.
A church stripped down to stone and steel, antennas bristling where the bell tower used to be.
A subway entrance sealed with blast doors and marked with warning codes and dates that ant sothing terrible to soone.
Vasquez stopped walking.
Aiden noticed imdiately.
"What is it?"
She pointed to a mural children painted in bright, almost offensive colors, holding hands beneath a sun that hadn’t existed for weeks.
"They left that," she said. "Everything else is stripped or armored. But not that."
Chen answered automatically. "Psychological landmark. Helps civilians orient. Reduces panic loops."
Vasquez turned on him. "You ever hear yourself talk?"
Chen flushed. "I’m just saying why command—"
"I know why command," she snapped. "I’m asking if you think it’s okay."
Silence stretched.
Aiden cut in before it broke wrong. "We don’t get to decide what stays human. We just try not to erase it."
They reached Grid Intersection K-19 just as voices started rising.
A civilian man was arguing with a municipal officer, clearance tablet flashing red. People slowed.
A small crowd ford, eyes sharp, hungry for distraction.
Crowds were dangerous.
Aiden moved forward, slow, hands visible.
"Sir," he said calmly, "you need to step back."
The man spun toward him, eyes bloodshot. "You think your rules matter? You think these lines on the ground an anything when those things co back?"
Aiden held his gaze. He could feel Malik tensing behind him. Could feel the system watching, silent.
"They matter because you’re still breathing," Aiden said. "And I’d like you to keep doing that."
The man laughed, sharp and bitter. "You soldiers think you’re holding the city. You’re just trapping us inside it."
Aiden nodded once. "Yeah. We are."
The man hesitated, thrown by the lack of denial.
"But the alternative is rubble," Aiden continued. "And nobody survives that."
Security drones descended, projecting low-frequency calming fields. The crowd thinned, reluctantly.
The man backed away, still staring. "This isn’t living," he said.
"No," Aiden replied. "It’s not."
The patrol resud.
Later, on an elevated walkway overlooking a sealed avenue, Kellan finally spoke again.
"So where does it actually get bad?"
Aiden stopped and pointed not at a street, but at the gaps between them.
"Where things don’t follow the plan," he said. "Where soone moves when they shouldn’t. Where a convoy’s late. Where a civilian decides they know better."
"And the aliens?" Rook asked.
"They wait for us to make it easy."
The patrol ended without contact.
No firefight. No glory.
Just exhaustion.
Back at the forward hub, helts ca off.
Faces were pale, eyes sharper than before.
The lieutenant listened to Aiden’s report, nodded once. "Sa route tomorrow. Then we change it."
"Why?" Rook asked before he could stop himself.
The lieutenant looked at him. "To see who breaks first."
That night, Aiden stood on the rooftop again, city humming beneath him.
"You flagged sothing earlier," he said quietly.
[Affirmative]
"Why didn’t you push it?"
[Human command priority superseded]
"And if it happens again?"
[System will notify upon request]
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