Lucien's world went black.
The last thing he felt was the reptile his claw slicing through his own bone, and then he felt the cold bite of concrete against his cheek. His final breath tasted of dust and iron.
Five minutes later, the city's night air shivered with static energy. The alley lay silent beneath a moon that refused to shine—for good reason. Everyone in Tokyo knew the truth by now: the monsters only came after the sun goes down, and ordinary weapons were useless against them. So, ten years ago, the government sanctioned a covert force: the Nightguard Corps. Their members had no innate powers, but each wore a prototype combat suit—woven with nanotech and occult circuitry—that granted superhuman might for the whole night.
A distant hum grew louder, announcing their arrival.
Three black‑armored silhouettes appeared at the alley's mouth, steps synchronized and purposeful. Their suits pulsed with cobalt veins:
One's fists crackled with kinetic energy.
One's forearms bloomed into razor‑sharp blades.
One's chest plate glowed like a fractured star.
They advanced on the fallen and tired beast, now twitching with a corrupted vitality. A single red eye flickered open—twice its size, twice its strength. The monster had absorbed the night's latent power, becoming a walking cataclysm.
But first things first.
The smallest of the three knelt beside Lucien's broken form. Her gauntlet glowed amber as she laid a hand on his heart. A gentle pulse of light raced through his blood—sacred nanites knitting flesh and bone. His heartbeat stuttered but then became steady, then lucien roared back to life.
He woke up confused, gasping for air. The healer's suit relaxed its glow as Lucien's eyes snapped open. He saw her helmet retracted—no name beneath, only eyes reflecting fierce determination.
Behind her, the other two leapt into action.
The Corps vs. the Reptile:
The blade‑armed warrior closed the distance in a mere seconds, slicing a deep gash across the monster's stomach. Black ichor spurted, hissing as it met air. The reptile screamed in pain and anger, each vibration breaking the nearby windows.
The gauntlet‑bruiser charged head‑on, fists ablaze with raw force. His blow dented the creature's ribcage, but the monster caught him by the visor and threw him like a ragdoll against the brick wall of the factory. Sparks flew as suit plating ground into concrete.
Lights in the healer's chest module flashed. She unleashed a wave of restorative energy, mending tears in her comrades' suits even as she kept Lucien alive.
Suddenly, the monster convulsed—his muscles were getting a lot bigger. Its size doubled in just mere moments; jagged spines burst from its shoulders. Its eyes flared blood‑red. The night itself seemed to recoil. He was getting stronger and stronger every second.
"Power surge!" the blade‑warrior shouted, pivoting to avoid a crushing swipe that smashed through a wall of a abandoned house.
The gauntlet‑bruiser roared in defiance and leapt into the air, delivering a sky‑shattering punch to the face of the monster. Concrete fractured beneath its impact. For a heartbeat, they had the advantage and the determination to continue to kill the monster—then the monster recovered, swiping up both warriors and tossing them aside like they were toys.
Lucien's Awakening:
From the edge of his vision, Lucien watched the carnage. His chest burned where the healer's nanites worked. His hands tingled with the primal gifts of vengeance: speed, strength, telekinesis, mind‑sense. Blood pounded in his ears. His eyes were covered with his own blood. The god within whispered, urging him to rise so he can defeat that monster.
He forced himself upright.
Pain seared his back, but he ignored it. The alley's neon flickered, casting his shadow long and jagged.
The healer saw him move and turned, eyes widening. She shouted to her teammates, but they were already battered.
Lucien stepped forward.
The brute force of the monster had drawn its focus to the corps alone—until now. The creature pivoted, unleashing a roar that cracked air like lightning.
Lucien's heart thundered. He flexed his telekinetic grip and summoned the shattered beams and trash cans strewn across the alley. He threw it towards the beast in a swirling tornado of metal and glass.
The monster staggered under the beating he was getting, but only for a moment. Its claws got sharper and shredded the debris.
Lucien clenched his fists.
He sprinted.
Faster than any human or animal—. In a blur, he was atop the beast's huge shoulder. He struck with every ounce of gorilla‑like strength he possessed: a single, savage haymaker to the hollowed skull.
The monster screamed—pounding the earth with everything that he had left. Lucien held on, knuckles white, adrenaline coursing through his veins.
Below, the corps rallied. The blade sliced glimmering arcs in the air; the gauntlet unleashed seismic blasts; the healer wove shields of golden light to protect them.
Victory at Dawn:
As the first pale fingers of dawn crept over the skyline, the three corps warriors delivered their final, combined assault:
A slashing arc of plasma‑edged steel.
A concussive shockwave of pure kinetic fury.
A burst of nanite‑charged radiance.
The monster's form disintegrated in a scream that shook the very stars. Its ash drifted away on the beautifull morning breeze, leaving only silence, rubble and destruction.
Lucien dropped to his knees, feeling heavy, as the healer rushed to his side.
She knelt, placing her knee as a pillow. "You did well," she said softly, voice calm despite exhaustion.
Lucien met her gaze through pain‑blurred eyes. He managed a shaky nod.
All around them, the Nightguard Corps suits powered down. The blade and gauntlet warriors approached, forming a protective circle around Lucien.
They stared at him in wordless awe—three strangers who had just fought to save his life, but still knew nothing of his true nature.
Above, the sky brightened. The monsters' reign was over for now, but Lucien sensed that a far greater battle had only just begun.
He stood, and looked to the three figures that just saved his life. He was thankfull.
No names were spoken.
No questions asked.
Just a moment of silence.
And in that pregnant silence, Lucien understood: he was no longer alone like he was for fourteen years, but he would never be the same.