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Chapter 5 - The construction and eyes

The new Red Zone was a hellscape of jagged green glass and screaming ion winds, but through the emerald haze, a new colour emerged: stark, clinical white.

The Viper Fangs had arrived. This elite GUI sub-faction—the same warriors who had humiliated the Black Hand in the Sahara—moved with a mechanical synchronization that bordered on the supernatural. Clad in high-tech white-and-blue power armour, their aesthetic was a direct homage to the Resistance forces Thomas Green had known in his past life, now refined with the knowledge of a polymath.

At the centre of the column, a massive Viper Fang MCV groaned to a halt. In a display of engineering that defied the laws of the wasteland, the vehicle unfolded into a sprawling command hub. Soon, the landscape was swarming with cargo haulers and automated building vehicles. They didn't just build a military base; they built a civilization.

Paved roads were laid down in hours, connecting modular public buildings and residential blocks.

Public Power Plants and Tiberium Spikes were erected, feeding into Public Silos that provided enough refined resources to instantly replenish everything used in the construction.

The Tiberium Control Network (TCN) rose like obsidian needles, pulsing with a frequency that kept the surrounding crystals locked and harmless.

Within a single month, the cratered ruin of the Outback had become a gleaming city of white stone and blue glass. Thousands of civilians, moved from the surrounding Yellow Zones, settled into their new homes. They walked through the filtered air of the plazas, stunned by the GUI's miracle and completely unaware of the eyes watching them from the shadows.

******

High above, hidden within the jagged mountain peaks, Kane and Marcion stood in the shadows.

They built a metropolis in a month. In the heart of a Liquid Tiberium blast zone. It is... impossible.

{His eyes reflecting the blue glow of the distant city} Observation is our priority, Marcion. I do not wish to disturb them. Not yet. I want to see what these 'Architects' truly intend.

Kane looked down at a data-slate. Among the thousands of refugees moved into the city, dozens of Nod members, disguised as weary labourers and orphaned families, had already successfully infiltrated the GUI's newest haven.

They think they have built a hidden sanctuary. But my spies are already among them. We will watch, we will learn, and we will wait. I want to know if they are truly as purpose-driven as my vision suggests, or if they are simply crazy enough to think they can own the Red Zone.

******

In the cold, shadowed war room of the Australian cathedral, Kane stood motionless, his silhouette cast long against the jagged stone walls. Before him, a holographic display flickered with the data-pings from the Viper Fangs' new territory. Beside him, Brother Marcion watched the readouts with a look of profound unease.

Prophet, the towers they are building... the TCN. It matches the descriptions found within the Tacitus—the same knowledge you have sought to fully decode for decades. But we always knew the truth: the Brotherhood is fanatical, but we are not crazy. We know Tiberium is a gift from heaven, yes, but it is also a double-edged sword that can consume the hand that holds it.

Marcion stepped closer to the projection of a pulsing GUI node.

If it were not for the staggering cost in resources and the decades of funding required, the Brotherhood would have pursued this path—controlling the spread—rather than seeking Divination or the Great Ascension through the flame. We knew the technology was there, hidden in the alien script, but we lacked the bridge to make it reality.

Kane did not turn. His eyes remained fixed on the white towers of the GUI city, which stood immune to the very ion storms that should have been tearing them apart.

This is why I am investigating, Marcion, I need to determine if this Thomas Green has accessed the Tacitus independently, or if he has found another source of knowledge entirely. The Tacitus speaks of a network that tames the world, yet he has built it in a month while my finest scientists still struggle with the translations.

Kane turned then, a cold, calculating light in his eyes. He looked at the data-pings of his spies—the Nod members hidden amongst the GUI refugees—reporting back on the "impossible" comforts of the new city.

Whether he is a rival genius or a thief of alien secrets is irrelevant. He has built a machine that works. And in doing so, he has saved me the trouble of building it myself. Regardless of where his knowledge originated, this 'Global Union Initiative' will not be an obstacle. They will become a part of my plan. They are the builders; I am the architect. And eventually, all roads—even those paved in white stone—lead back to me.

******

Brother Marcion nodded slowly, his eyes never leaving the thermal readouts of the GUI's gleaming infrastructure. To him, Tiberium had always been a sacred treasure, but the TCN was a godsend—a holy leash for a wild deity. It was the tool the Brotherhood had always lacked: a way to wield the most valuable resource in the universe without burning their own hands in the process.

It is the perfect vessel for the gift.

But the silence of the observation post was broken by a rhythmic thrumming from the valley below. On the GUI's long-range scanners, a massive, jagged heat signature appeared, moving like a tidal wave across the glass dunes.

A mutant horde was coming. Driven by the recent Liquid Tiberium blast, thousands of Visceroids, mutated fiends, and even flying, screeching monstrosities were charging straight for the scent of the new city. It was a sea of flesh and green glass, a nightmare born from the Outback's new atmosphere.

The GUI Senator in charge of the Australian Red Zone didn't hesitate.

Authorize full defensive protocols. Show the locals that the Union does not hide behind walls.

The white-and-blue gates slid open. The Viper Fangs poured out in a display of tactical perfection. Riflemen and Grenadiers took the high ground, while Snipers found perches atop the TCN towers. Below them, a pack of Coyote buggies raced forward, their engines humming as they flanked the horde's lead elements.

Then, the heavy support arrived. Armadillos rumbled into position, their modular frames shifting to deploy defensive barriers. Beside them, a new unit caught Marcion's eye: the Porcupine.

The Porcupine was a bristling, low-slung armoured vehicle, its surface covered in automated, high-tracking turrets. As the first wave of Visceroids neared, the Porcupine erupted. It was a dome of lead and fire; the turrets didn't just shred the ground-based mutants—they snapped upward with terrifying speed, tracking the flying monsters in the sky. The air was filled with the sound of rapid-fire flak cannons and machine guns as the Porcupine swatted mutated flyers out of the clouds as easily as it mowed down the fiends on the sand.

Marcion found himself salivating at the sight.

That... that iron beast," he whispered. "It is magnificent. A universal shield of fire. Think of the purging we could rain down with such a design.

High above, Dragonflies buzzed through the air, their machine guns and "Wasp" missiles picking off the larger behemoths that survived the Porcupine's hail of lead.

Kane watched it all with a terrifyingly calm focus. He wasn't just watching a battle; he was studying a blueprint. He saw how the GUI's units were built—makeshift compared to the alien tech he desired, yet incredibly efficient and easy to mass-produce.

See how they integrate the infantry with the mobile platforms, LEGION. They do not rely on raw zeal; they rely on the synergy of the machine. A slow smile spread across the Prophet's face. He was already seeing how he could adapt the GUI's modular efficiency—and the Porcupine's all-purpose lethality—for his own legions. The Union had come to Australia to build a city, but they had unwittingly given Kane the sparks he needed for his next generation of war.

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