Chapter 1081: Undercut.
The harbor was no longer a harbor. It was a graveyard. Ships burned on the water, their hulls cracking and groaning as flames chewed through steel. The smell of oil and salt fused into one choking haze. Smoke towered above the city, blotting out the rising sun, and every crash of falling metal carried the weight of another lost crew, another fragment of order sinking into chaos.
Cain stood at the edge of the ruined pier, boots slick with seawater and ash. His blade hung loose at his side, its edge smeared with black ichor that steamed as the breeze touched it. He had fought all night, and still the tide brought more.
"They’re adapting," Susan said. Her bandaged arm trembled as she reloaded her rifle. The clip clicked in, but her hands shook just enough that Cain saw the exhaustion in her bones. "Whatever they are, they’re not coming blind anymore. They move like they’re learning."
Cain didn’t answer. His eyes followed the water. The sea no longer moved with natural rhythm; it pulsed, as if something vast breathed beneath the surface. The creatures had clawed out from there at dusk—scaled horrors with eyes like lanterns, teeth too long for their mouths, and voices like sirens twisting through broken radios. At first, Cain thought them mindless. But now, as the waves rolled, he saw the order in their madness. Formations. Strategy.
"They’ll keep coming," Cain said flatly. "They want the city drowned. Burned. Doesn’t matter which."
Susan spat into the ash-stained tide. "And the Grid thinks bullets will solve that?"
Behind them, the whine of drones cut through the smoke. Sleek machines swooped overhead, their searchlights slicing the haze. Steel wings bristled with cannons, spraying fire into the surf. Explosions bloomed like molten flowers across the water, but when the smoke cleared, more shadows rose, undeterred.
"Bullets don’t teach the sea to starve," Cain muttered.
Steve’s voice buzzed in their comms. "The Grid’s command wants you both pulled back. District Twelve is exposed. They’re saying abandon the docks, regroup inland."
Cain’s jaw set. "Inland is already dead if the sea wins."
Static answered him, followed by Steve’s reluctant sigh. "Then make it fast. You’ve got one chance before the chain of command overrides me."
Susan shouldered her rifle, eyes narrowing. "Then let’s not waste it."
The water heaved. Something massive shifted beneath the surface, casting waves that smashed broken ships against one another. Cain stepped forward, blade raised, as the tide peeled open. Out of it climbed a shape too large for the pier, too wrong for the human eye to name. Its skin glistened like tar, its limbs twisted like anchors fused to flesh. At its crown, a cluster of eyes blinked open, each one reflecting the flames of the burning harbor.
The soldiers nearby panicked, shouting, scrambling to fire. Cain heard the panic in their voices, the kind that ended battles before they began. He didn’t wait for command. He moved.
The blade flared as he swung, cutting a wide arc that carved through one of the beast’s reaching limbs. Black blood sprayed, hissing where it struck seawater. The monster shrieked, a sound that rattled bones and bent iron, but Cain did not falter.
Susan covered him, each shot sharp and precise, hammering into the beast’s eyes until smoke and gore burst from its crown. Still, the creature pressed forward, dragging its body onto the pier, crushing stone beneath its weight.
Cain shouted over the roar, "This is their anchor!"
Susan’s eyes widened. "You mean—"
"If it lives, more come."
She didn’t argue. She emptied her clip into its chest, the recoil tearing at her bandaged arm. Cain drove forward, sword plunging deep into its flesh. He twisted, forcing the wound wider, even as the monster slammed a limb down, shattering the pier.
The world shook. Water surged in, swallowing stone, dragging men and machines into the depths. Cain held fast, the blade sunk deep, his body drenched in blood not his own.
Susan’s voice cut through the chaos. "Cain—behind you!"
Another shadow rose from the surf, smaller but faster, jaws snapping like rusted steel. Cain tore the sword free, spun, and split it from throat to spine. He didn’t stop moving. If he stopped, he knew the sea would take him too.
The larger beast convulsed, its eyes bursting one by one, smoke pouring from the wounds. With a final heave, Cain dragged the blade across its chest in a cross-cut, opening it from shoulder to belly. The monster collapsed, half in the water, half on the ruined pier.
Silence fell, broken only by the hiss of burning oil. Then, slowly, the waves stilled. The smaller creatures that had lingered began to retreat, melting back into the black water.
Susan staggered to Cain’s side. Her face was pale, bloodied, but her voice carried. "Tell me that’s it."
Cain shook his head once. "That was just the scout."
Her eyes went wide. "The scout?"
Cain wiped his blade against the corpse, black ichor smearing the steel. "The sea doesn’t send its generals first. That was the warning."
Steve’s voice crackled again. "Cain. Susan. Pull back now. They’re moving ships in. Heavy artillery. You’ve bought them time—don’t waste it."
Cain looked out at the water. The corpse of the beast smoked as it drifted back into the waves, as if the sea itself reclaimed its dead. For a moment, Cain swore he heard laughter—not from the docks, not from the comms, but from the ocean itself.
He turned to Susan. "We’re out of time. Next comes war."
The city groaned behind them, towers trembling as alarms howled across the districts. And from the horizon, where dawn should have broken clear, Cain saw only storm clouds. Not weather. Not chance. The sea itself, marching closer.
Cain did not trust silence; silence hid plots. They would not wait. They would not forgive. They would come hungry, and when they did, Cain would be there—cold, precise, ready to bleed the sea.