Elven Invasion
Chapter 97: The Waking Depths
POV 1: Commander Asha Okonkwo – INS Vikrant, Forward Command Deck
The sun broke over the Indian Ocean like the calm before a storm, its light glinting off the deck of the INS Vikrant. Commander Asha Okonkwo had barely slept—her mind refused peace. She reviewed the latest tactical feeds from the forward drones, her jaw tight.
“Commander,” her operations officer said, “the USS George Washington is now within full operational range. Admiral Lancaster is requesting a live sync of command protocols for integrated engagement.”
Asha gave a curt nod. “Initiate joint command mode. Synchronize with Sky-Crown’s orbital uplink as well. No more delays.”
The command deck’s holotable lit up, merging data from American and Indian sources. Overlays of mech formations—icons denoting the Grey Eagles, Blue Titans, Red Archers, and Green Guardians—appeared in tight formation.
“Signal the mech captains for direct uplink,” Asha added. “It’s time we formalize our counteroffensive.”
POV 2: Admiral Henry Lancaster – USS George Washington, CIC
Admiral Lancaster stood still as the command interface stabilized, the faces of four familiar captains appearing across the bridge monitors.
“Status?” he asked without preamble.
Major Viktor Petrov of the Blue Titans responded first, his voice a granite rumble. “Gatling systems online. All Titans are locked and loaded.”
Colonel Zhao Wei, sharp-eyed and intense, nodded. “Red Archers have already tagged enemy movements near the Zanzibar trench. We’ll eliminate high-value targets as they reveal themselves.”
Commander Arjun Mehta
, his calm aura radiating from the screen, added, “Green Guardians are holding the shield perimeter. We’re detecting rising thermal and magical interference—something stirs in the deep.”
Captain Samuel Briggs, leader of the Grey Eagles, leaned forward, shadows playing across his face. “The cloaks work. We’ll go silent and forward-scout the rift zone.”
“Good,” Lancaster said. “We don’t know if what’s coming is more Leviathan-class, but if it is, we hit it together.”
POV 3: Mary – Observation Deck, INS Vikrant
Mary stood barefoot in a sealed observation pod, gazing into the ocean. Even through tempered glass and psychic shielding, she could hear it—the thrum of something massive shifting in the depths. Her connection to the sea, a gift or curse born from her fusion with the Leviathan, had not weakened. If anything, it was stronger.
Dr. Patel joined her silently, holding a fresh data slate. “Neural patterns are stabilizing, but…” He hesitated. “The resonance is climbing. It’s synchronized with a deep-sea beacon just detected off the coast of Madagascar.”
“A beacon?” Mary frowned.
“Yes. Buried inside a sunken temple, according to Sky-Crown orbital scans.”
Mary’s voice dropped. “They didn’t come alone. The Drowned Crown was only their voice… not their mind.”
A thought pierced her—alien, cold, and vast: We see you.
She stumbled slightly, clutching the glass. “It’s awake. And it knows me.”
POV 4: Dyana – Sky-Crown, Orbital Command
Dyana’s hands tightened around the railing as the data from orbital scans poured in. Dozens of ancient magical sigils had activated across the ocean floor. Some matched Elven script, but others… were older.
“Pull every deep-sea relic schematic,” she ordered. “Cross-reference with pre-Elven pantheon records. I want to know what lies beneath.”
Her aide approached. “Princess, Our scans show we’ve lost contact with two unmanned drones in Rift Zone Omega.”
Dyana narrowed her eyes. “Ask Asha to send the Grey Eagles. I have seen them fight in Antarctica If it’s stealth, they’ll see it before it sees them.”
Then her console pinged. An incoming encrypted signal.
Mary.
“Mary,” Dyana said through the encrypted channel, her voice steadied despite the tremor under her skin.
“Whatever this is, it’s not just magical,” Mary whispered. “It’s alive—and it’s older than Leviathan.”
Dyana’s breath caught. “Then the war just changed.”
POV 5: Grey Eagles – Rift Zone Omega
Captain Samuel Briggs crouched in his sleek, grey mech, nearly invisible even to thermal scans. His squad had reached the Rift Zone first. They hovered just above a sudden crevasse on the ocean floor—blackness yawning open, leaking violet luminescence.
“Briggs to Command,” he whispered. “We found the source. It’s… it’s a heart.”
“A heart?” Asha’s voice came through.
He zoomed in. Inside the chasm, miles below, a massive, pulsing organ—larger than a stadium—beat slowly, encased in stone and sigils of molten silver.
Then it moved.
A tendril of inky magic lashed upward. One of Briggs’ mechs vanished in an instant—no warning, no explosion.
“GREY FOUR IS GONE!” Briggs shouted. “It saw us!”
He broke cloak and fired twin plasma lances. “RETREAT!”
POV 6: Joint Forces – Tanzanian Coastline
The skies turned dark even though it was midday. Storms—unnatural and sudden—gathered above the coastline. The ground trembled.
Commander Asha barked commands as Lancaster’s fleet began deploying air and naval drones.
“Mech teams, form up! Green Guardians, hold the line!” she ordered.
Arjun’s green mech stepped forward, shields activating with a ripple. “Domes locked. Guardians, prepare counter-barrier protocols. We can’t let this thing surface.”
Red Archers scattered into sniper positions as Colonel Zhao began triangulating energy surges.
“Firing solution acquired,” Zhao muttered. “Permission to fire on rift edges?”
“Granted,” Asha said.
Dozens of missiles screamed through the air. The moment they struck the ocean, a roar like a god’s breath echoed up from below.
Then it broke the surface.
POV 7: The Abyssal Entity
From the rift arose not another Leviathan, but something older. The Ravager of Currents, a serpent of coral, void-flesh, and ancient bone, writhed free from the deep. Its eyes were whirlpools, each a window into oceans long gone.
And Mary heard its voice in her mind: We are the Owners of Currents and shall claim our rule.
POV 8: Vaelin Thorne – Neutralist Fortress
Vaelin stood atop the ancient watchtower, her magic-sight piercing across oceans. The entity that now walked the surface was more dangerous than the one her ancestors had tried to sealed many eons ago but ultimately failed to do so and had to beg Goddess Luna for her divine grace.
She clenched her jaw. “Ghost,” she said to the shadow behind her. “Is this what you meant by inevitability?”
He nodded. “Yes. But it’s not your doom. Not yet.”
He handed her the data crystal once more. “We can chain it. Bind it. But we need your help. You and Mary.”
Vaelin stared at the rising storm. She saw armies moving. She saw alliances shifting.
“Then it’s time to call a Conclave.”
Ghost tilted his head. “Of Elves?”
“No,” she said. “Of everyone who wants to survive.”