The horn was still echoing when Alexei reached the lower fence.
Dust hung in the air like ash.
Through it, the yard pulsed—boots striking tal, engines turning, orders shouted and lost. The Saints were reforming, but chaos had rhythm, and Alexei knew how to hear it.
He crouched in the shade of a tanker, breathing slow. Each inhale ca colder than the last. Frost spidered faintly from his knuckles to the tal beneath them.
Psycho purred. You feel it too.
Alexei didn’t answer. He didn’t need to. It was impossible to miss if you knew what you were looking for.
Beyond the yard, the stage rose like an altar built from scavenged sheet iron and truck parts.
Marrow stood on it, tall and bare-ard, a black skull painted over his face.
The man had the posture of soone who thought pain could be trained into holiness. His voice carried without effort—steady, practiced, dangerous.
"Brothers," he said, "the world is on fire. We are the iron that didn’t lt."
The crowd roared.
Alexei leaned against the tanker and watched the man lift his arms. The Saints below him swayed in ti, fists raised, faith without thought. Even the caged dead stilled at the sound.
Psycho’s voice slipped through the static under Alexei’s skin. He’s pretending to be what we already are.
Alexei’s mouth twitched. "Then let’s remind him that a fake can never be as good as the original."
He stepped out from cover, moving slow.
The heat that had baked the yard began to fade; a thin line of frost curled across the rim of his sleeve. Each step felt lighter. He could feel Psycho stretching underneath his skin, testing the edges of control.
You could let go, Psycho murmured. Just a little bit more.
"Not yet. It’s not ti. I can still handle it."
You say that every ti. Psycho side like a little kid being denied ice cream for dessert.
Alexei’s boots crunched on the gravel.
Saints turned their heads toward the sound, confusion blooming before fear. The ones closest to him froze, eyes narrowing. They couldn’t place what felt wrong—only that it did.
He raised his weapon, sighting the man on the stage.
Marrow noticed him then. His sermon faltered for half a beat. He didn’t call for his n. He only smiled. "A ghost," he said, voice low, carrying. "Or sothing that thinks it is."
Alexei didn’t blink.
The temperature dropped again. Sweat on the n’s arms turned to steam. A flar gun hissed and failed to ignite.
"It’s snowing," one of the Saints whispered.
Psycho’s laugh was a vibration that shook through Alexei’s chest. Now they understand.
The first shot took the man beside Marrow in the shoulder. The second cut the flar line near the stage steps. Gas spilled across the ground in a shimring sheet.
Marrow didn’t duck. He spread his arms wider, voice rising above the panic. "You see? Even the cold serves the faithful!"
Alexei whispered, "Liar. The cold doesn’t serve anyone but ."
He moved faster than thought—crossing open ground between heartbeats.
The Saints barely had ti to lift their weapons. The first that tried lost his gun hand; the second collapsed from a throat strike that shattered bone.
He wasn’t running anymore.
He was flowing, movent stripped of hesitation. Psycho filled the gaps in muscle mory—the fractions of seconds between breath and intent.
Every shot, every strike, every shift of balance was perfect.
You’re magnificent when you stop pretending to be small. When you stop pretending to be human, Psycho told him.
The words ca with pride, not control. Alexei knew the difference.
He ducked under a flar burst and slamd the rifle butt into its tank.
The tal split as fire blood in the wrong direction. The explosion threw him sideways, heat searing the edge of his coat, but the frost on his skin didn’t lt.
He landed in a crouch, head tilted, breath fogging in the heat. The Saints hesitated. None wanted to be the next to test whatever he’d beco.
Psycho surged, delighted. We could take all of them. It would be so easy. Like killing ants...or sothing else that is small.
"Not all," Alexei murmured. "Not yet."
He looked up at Marrow. The man stood on the stage like a priest before a storm, eyes wide with sothing between awe and calculation.
"You’re not one of mine," Marrow called down. "But you should be."
Alexei wiped blood from his jaw with the back of his hand. "I already belong to soone."
"To who?"
He didn’t answer. The air around him glittered faintly, a shimr of ice catching in the sunlight. The ground under his boots frosted white.
Marrow’s smile turned. "You bring winter to my yard? Then let’s see if your god bleeds."
The Saints behind him raised their rifles in unison.
Alexei’s mind went still.
You know how this ends, Psycho whispered.
"I do."
He lifted his weapon and fired.
The first row fell before the sound reached them.
The next wave ducked, shooting blind through dust and fear. Bullets hissed through smoke; one grazed his shoulder, leaving a white scar that didn’t bleed.
Psycho leaned close inside him, voice like a hum through glass. They’re going to run soon.
"Let them."
You’re enjoying this.
Alexei’s grin was small, sharp. "So are you."
The tankers behind him groaned as heat and cold fought across their surfaces, tal expanding and contracting in uneven rhythm. Steam poured through ruptures in the seams.
"Echo, this is Alpha," Zubair’s voice crackled faintly in his ear. "Report."
Alexei pressed a finger to the mic, eyes still on the stage. "Stage live. Target active."
Static. Then Sera’s voice—clear, cold. "Don’t waste your shot."
Psycho’s laughter rippled like a current under his ribs. She’s watching.
"I know."
Then make it art. Show her why she should be looking at us more than anyone else.
He fired again.
The bullet tore through the stage supports. Marrow leapt clear, rolling into the dust, robes singed and blackened. His n scread orders; the cages rattled like thunder.
Alexei turned slightly, just enough to see the ripple in the air—the way the heat bent away from him, leaving a thin shell of frost that shimred in place.
His eyes caught their reflection in the tanker beside him: blue gone white, veins like ice threads beneath translucent skin.
Psycho pressed closer, voice low. One day you’ll stop holding back.
"Maybe."
And then?
"Then the world learns what quiet really is."
He raised the rifle one last ti. Through the smoke, he saw Marrow crawling toward the altar, trying to reach sothing under it—a detonator, a torch, maybe faith itself.
Alexei exhaled.
The shot broke the altar apart, scattering ash and bone. The explosion that followed drowned out the horn, the voices, and the last of the sunlight.
When the dust settled, the stage was gone.
Psycho’s hum quieted, almost tender. See? Beautiful.
Alexei stood in the ruin, frost crawling up his sleeves. "She’ll say it was enough."
But was it though?
He thought about it, eyes pale and unblinking. "It’s enough for now."
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