The word hung in the heat.
"Halt."
It didn’t echo. The border ate sound. The only thing that moved was dust, drifting slow around the boots of the soldiers who had appeared out of the shimr.
Zubair kept both hands on the wheel.
He didn’t look at anyone in the Humr, but Elias saw the small tendons in his forearms tighten.
Beside him, Sera tilted her head as if soone had played a new note in a song. In the back seat beside him, Lachlan had gone very still, and Alexei’s gaze tracked—not the n—but the spaces between them.
Luci’s claws clicked once in the cargo space. Then he stilled too.
They are better trained than you, the creature in Elias’s head said, bored. Better synchronized. Better fed. That is what order looks like when it fears extinction.
Elias ignored it. "Hands visible," he said quietly. "No weapons."
"We didn’t reach for any," Lachlan muttered.
"You were thinking about it."
"I’m always thinking about it. But that doesn’t an that I do it."
Zubair exhaled once and lifted his hands off the wheel, fingers spread.
Sera did the sa, elbows loose, like she was following along with a ga. Elias flexed his fingers to make sure they weren’t curled, then placed both palms flat on his thighs where the soldiers could see.
Outside, one of the soldiers lifted a device from his belt and pointed it toward the Humr. It was small, boxy, smudged with use. A green light scanned across the windshield in a straight, unwavering line.
Spectral read, the creature supplied. Biotric sweep. Range ten ters. Not built for subtlety. You could have designed better if I were to help you.
"Then why didn’t you?" Elias muttered.
Because I am trapped in you and you think you are superior to . You need to learn what life is truly like for soone who can’t even feed himself.
Elias ignored the creature as the green light passed over him. Warmth prickled over his face, down his throat, across his chest. It wasn’t painful, just invasive. The device chirped quietly, and the soldier flicked two fingers without looking back.
"Identify," a filtered voice ordered.
The accent was from nowhere. Flattened. Every region polished off.
Zubair didn’t move. "We’re transit," he said through the windshield. "From Region O. Headed to Region L."
"That is not an authorized route."
"It’s the fastest route," Elias put in. His mouth was dry. "And you’re still receiving band transmissions if you can scan us, which ans you’re still connected to the northern grid. Our IDs—"
"You have no current CDC clearance," the soldier cut in. "Step out of the vehicle."
Elias almost said no.
He hated the way the soldiers stood—too relaxed for a real threat, too confident they wouldn’t be shot first.
That ant they were used to people obeying. Which ant they were very used to people knowing what hung over the fence on the other side.
You are stalling. That is fear. Has no one ever told you that fear is a primal reaction. I wouldn’t want your lesser human mind to explode when you realise that it isn’t enough to keep you safe and sound.
"It’s caution," Elias snapped in his head.
No. It is an old instinct pretending to be intellect. Kind of like you in that regard.
Sera unbuckled her belt without being told. The click sounded loud in the small space. She opened her door and slid out first, dropping lightly to the dusty ground.
Sun hit her face and turned her eyes bright. Luci moved at the sa ti, his massive body flowing out of the rear cargo space like smoke. He ca to stand beside her, head level with her hip, teeth not bared—but visible.
Every rifle outside lifted a fraction of an inch.
"Non-registered animal," one soldier said.
"Dire wolf," Sera corrected calmly. "Don’t worry. He listens and is house trained. That’s more than I can say about most males."
"He will be controlled."
"He is controlled," she said, and left it at that.
Zubair climbed out next, slow, his hands still visible.
Lachlan swung his legs over the seat and jumped down, dust puffing under his boots. Alexei slid out from his side, his eyes half-hooded and watching everything. Elias took a breath and stepped into the heat.
The air on this side of the shimr slled wrong.
It wasn’t just bleach—it was bleach over dust, over oil, over human bodies that had been inside sealed armor for too long.
Elias couldn’t help but wrinkle his nose as he fought hard to control his facial reactions. Sweat and disinfectant and old tal didn’t sll good under any circumstances. When it was tainted with the scent of disease, it made it even worse.
They kept the disease and the bureaucracy, the creature said, mildly amused. An admirable commitnt to misery and control.
The soldiers tightened their semicircle, not enough to crowd, just enough to say you do not go back in unless we let you. The one in front—slightly taller, armor newer, crimson CDC emblem less chipped—took a step forward.
"Line up," he said. "Hands where they can be seen."
Sera moved first again, because of course she did. She stepped forward and let her hands hang loose at her sides, gaze roving over the soldiers’ gear like she was browsing a market stall.
Lachlan ca to stand a little left of her, shoulders relaxed, smile gone. Zubair took the anchor on the right. Alexei stationed himself between, half a step behind, a wedge.
Elias took his place beside them, feeling exposed in a way he hadn’t felt since the outbreak started. Out in the wasteland, threat was loud and feral. Here it was polite.
The lead soldier lifted the scanner again, this ti at torso level. He started with Sera.
The device chirped once.
The soldier hesitated.
Elias saw it. It was small—just a pause, a quarter-breath—but it was there. The visor dipped, then straightened. The soldier did not say "clear."
Interesting, the creature purred. She breaks their tric. Good. Let them choke on her as they try to figure out what she is.
The scanner moved to Lachlan. It chirped again, but this ti the light strobed yellow instead of green. The soldier didn’t flinch.
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