God Ash: Remnants of the fallen.

Chapter 1075: Waging War From the Sea (1).



Cain slept little. When he did, it was never clean. Dreams pressed close like damp walls, suffocating him in fragments he couldn't shake. A woman's scream folded into a gunshot. A hallway burning. The city itself, bleeding black smoke from every seam. He woke with his hand already on the hilt of his blade, knuckles pale in the dark.

Susan hadn't stirred. She lay stretched on the couch, wrapped in a ragged blanket, face drawn tight from pain even in sleep. Her breathing rattled like rusted pipes. Cain's eyes lingered, but only long enough to confirm she was still alive.

He pulled a chair close to the window. The safehouse's glass panes were streaked with grime, but through them the first veins of daylight crawled between towers. The city never looked new, only repainted, patched, stitched together from old bones. It carried history the way a corpse carried scars. Cain had learned to read those scars. Every scar told him one thing: the city ate what it wanted.

The comm crackled, dragging him out of the silence. Steve again. His voice came low, urgent.

"They've started asking questions downtown. Reports don't match. Some say it was a blackout, others claim chemical fire. Grid's choking the feeds, but Cain, listen—they tagged your face."

Cain's jaw tightened. "How long?"

"Hours. Maybe less. They'll send a team before the sun's fully up. This isn't cover-up level anymore. This is execution level."

Cain leaned back, staring at the city's skyline as if it were an adversary he'd been preparing to fight for years. "Let them come."

Steve hissed frustration through the comm. "You don't get it. They won't just scrub you. They'll bury everyone tied to you. Susan. Me. Every whisper you've ever let loose."

Susan stirred, half-awake, listening without letting on. Her hand shifted under the blanket, searching instinctively for the cigarette pack.

Cain's silence stretched until Steve swore and cut the line.

Minutes passed before Susan spoke. Her voice was rough, gravel ground against glass. "You're going to kill us both staying here."

Cain didn't look at her. "You were already marked. Being near me only sharpened the knife."

She coughed, a wet sound that pulled at the edges of the quiet. "You say that like it's supposed to comfort me."

"It isn't."

The cigarette lighter clicked. The smoke curled into the stale air, hanging above her like a second shadow. She stared at him, eyes bloodshot but sharp. "Then what's the plan?"

Cain turned from the window, finally meeting her gaze. His face was unreadable, stone carved without patience for softness. "You can't move far. They'll track hospitals, pharmacies. Staying hidden buys us time, nothing more."

Susan smirked bitterly. "Time for what? You planning to out-stare the city into submission?"

"Time to choose which door we open."

She blew smoke at him, a thin laugh chasing it. "Always so cryptic. Just once, Cain, just once, say something human."

Cain didn't answer. He reached for his blade, the motion automatic, grounding. The steel caught a shard of light.

Outside, engines hummed low. Not civilian. Too precise, too measured. Cain stood, every muscle coiled.

Susan's eyes narrowed. "Already?"

Cain nodded once. "They don't waste time."

He crossed to the door, pressing his ear to the frame. Boots on asphalt. At least six, moving in rhythm. Not police—Grid's dogs. Cleaners.

Susan flicked her cigarette into the ashtray and tried to rise. Pain folded her back onto the couch. Cain glanced once, then dragged the chair across the floor, placing it square against the door. He sat in it, sword resting across his knees, posture steady.

The first knock came. Gentle. Civilized. A courtesy.

"Mr. Cain," a voice called, smooth as glass. "We'd like a word."

Cain didn't move.

The knock came again, harder. Then silence.

Susan whispered, "You going to answer?"

Cain shook his head. "They're not here for words."

Outside, whispers rose. The kind trained men used when preparing breach. Metal brushed metal.

Cain's grip tightened. His heart was steady, not racing. This was ritual, an old dance. He had walked through too many rooms like this, watched too many doors break.

The explosion ripped the hinges free. The door crashed inward. Cain rose with it, blade singing through air before the dust had settled.

Steel met flesh. The first Cleaner fell before his rifle cleared its sling. Cain pivoted, blade low, cutting through the second's thigh, bone cracking. Blood sprayed the wall.

Susan dragged herself from the couch, teeth clenched against pain. She snatched the comm, static screaming in her ear. "Steve, they're here—"

Gunfire tore through the room. Bullets shattered plaster, shredded fabric. Cain moved through it, a shadow with edges, each strike final. He counted bodies without thinking—three, four, five—each falling with soundless efficiency.

The sixth tried to retreat, shouting for backup. Cain caught him at the threshold, drove steel through his chest, and let him collapse into the morning light.

Silence again. Not peace—only pause.

Susan stared at him, shaking. "You think you can keep doing this forever?"

Cain wiped the blade on the fallen man's coat. His eyes were cold, distant. "Forever isn't required. Only long enough."

Steve's voice exploded through the comm, frantic. "Cain! What the hell was that? The Grid's already spinning the feeds. They'll send more. You've just bought yourself the whole board."

Cain sheathed his sword, grabbed Susan's coat, and tossed it over her shoulders. "Then we move."

"Where?" she hissed.

He looked out at the towers, smoke still rising from broken alleys. The city loomed, waiting, watching. His jaw set like stone.

"Toward the heart. Toward the ones pulling the strings."

Susan let out a ragged laugh. "You're insane."

Cain finally glanced back at her, eyes like storm-cut glass.

"Insanity's the only thing this city respects."

Cain opened the window wider, letting the city's chill spill in. Sirens echoed faintly, not for him, but close enough to remind him of the hourglass already running. He pulled Susan upright, steadied her with one arm, and muttered, "We move now, or we'll be buried here." She didn't argue this time.


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