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Chapter 2 - Paradise and suspicion

In the shaded plazas of a city that technically shouldn't exist, the air was cool, filtered, and smelled of rain—a scent forgotten by most of the planet. Here, in the heart of a former Red Zone, the sky was not a bruised purple, but a clear, artificial blue maintained by shimmering hexagonal displacement fields.

Groups of citizens sat at outdoor cafes, their conversation a low hum of contentment that would be alien to the starving refugees of the Yellow Zones or the terrified soldiers of the GDI.

I still catch myself checking my wrists for green veins every morning.

He gestured toward the horizon where the massive, obsidian spires of the Tiberium Control Network (TCN) pierced the clouds.

Back in the slums of the Sarajevo Yellow Zone, we lived in fear of a single crystal shard. Now? Look at those towers. They've turned the 'Devil's Candy' into a garden fence.

A woman at the next table nodded, tapping a holographic interface that displayed the city's real-time environmental stats.

It's like we walked straight into a science-fiction holofilm. My brother is still stuck in a GDI Blue Zone, paying eighty percent of his credits just for 'protection' and rationed oxygen. He didn't believe me when I sent him the sensor pings. He thinks I'm living in a Nod hallucination.

Let them think what they want, the GDI calls this land 'uninhabitable.' The Brotherhood calls it 'sacred ground.' But the Global Union Initiative just called it home. They actually spent the resources to stabilize the soil instead of just building walls around the 'clean' parts.

The conversation drifted toward the sheer impossibility of their surroundings. To the rest of the world, the Red Zones were graveyards of jagged glass and lethal ion storms. But here, the GUI's technology had achieved the unthinkable: a localized terraforming grid. The TCN didn't just push the Tiberium back; it harmonized with the crystals, locking their growth at the borders and siphoning their energy to power the very cities they once sought to consume.

The Senate actually listens. The Senate actually listens," an elderly man added, his voice thick with gratitude. "They didn't see us as 'collateral' or 'mutant-adjacent.' They gave us the tech to fight back against the environment itself. I've lived through two Tiberium Wars, and this is the first time I haven't felt like a victim of the map.

As a sleek, silent transport hummed overhead—gravity-defying and elegant—a sense of quiet pride settled over the plaza. They were the secret beneficiaries of a genius they rarely saw, living in a paradise carved out of hell, grateful to a government that had finally turned the lights back on in a world that was supposed to be dying.

******

The year is 2032. The Firestorm Crisis has ended with the destruction of CABAL's core, leaving the world's superpowers in a state of exhausted paranoia. GDI, reeling from the realization that Earth's atmosphere might become toxic within a year, has turned its eyes toward the Tacitus, desperately hoping the alien device holds the key to planetary survival.

Inside GDI High Command, the holographic war table glowed with a sickly yellow hue. General Jack Granger stood with his arms crossed, watching red "decrease" markers blink across the Eurasian sectors.

The numbers don't add up, in the months following CABAL's fall, we've lost track of nearly three hundred thousand civilians in the Mediterranean Yellow Zones alone. Entire shanty towns are being found empty—no signs of struggle, no blood, no Tiberium spikes. Just... gone.

It's the Brotherhood, it's the Brotherhood," one of the younger colonels spat. "With Anton Slavik dead, they're more fractured and dangerous than ever. They're dragging these people into their 'Ascension' cult to rebuild their ranks. I'm not waiting for another world-ending crisis. I want a full crackdown on every known Nod cell. We squeeze them until they tell us where these people are being moved.

******

Thousands of miles away, in the fortified heart of a clandestine cathedral, Brother Marcion—the leader of the newly formed Black Hand—stared at a similar data stream. He was a man of fire and brimstone, yet his current expression was one of genuine bewilderment.

Our recruitment numbers are steady, but they are not these numbers," Marcion muttered.

A hooded acolyte knelt before him.

Great Brother, the GDI is mobilizing. They are raiding our shrines in the Yellow Zones, claiming we are abducting the populace. But our missions have only brought in a fraction of the missing. We have lost three cells in the last forty-eight hours to GDI 'pacification' teams.

Marcion slammed a fist onto his desk.

Fools! If I were taking that many people, I would be parading them in the streets to mock the GDI's weakness. We aren't taking them, and GDI isn't taking them.

He looked at a satellite feed of the Great African Desert—a Red Zone where his scouts had recently reported "unusual atmospheric readings" that disappeared as soon as they were approached.

Someone is poaching our flock, a third hand is at work in the shadows, and they are stealing the very souls we need for the next Great War. Find them. I want to know who is brave enough to rob the Brotherhood while the Prophet remains silent.

******

The ruins of the Cairo Yellow Zone were a symphony of violence. GDI infantry, backed by aging Wolverine walkers, pushed through the crumbling streets with a desperate ferocity. They believed they were rescuing thousands of abducted citizens; the Black Hand believed they were defending their faith against a genocidal crackdown.

Across the sector, the conflict was a bloodbath of misunderstanding. Brother Marcion, certain his Order was being framed, had made a risky gambit. Unlike the rest of the Brotherhood, Marcion's Black Hand held stealth in contempt, viewing it as the tool of cowards. He committed half of his strength to meet the GDI "pacifiers" head-on in a brutal display of flame and heavy armor. The other half—his most disciplined inquisitors and Purifier walkers—was dispatched into the deep Red Zones of the Sahara to find the "poachers" through sheer, scorched-earth investigation.

In the middle of this chaos, a Global Union Initiative transport convoy moved with eerie silence through a canyon of twisted metal and crystalline dust.

Colonel Henry Sonders sat in the command seat of a GUI lead vehicle, his eyes darting across a tactical HUD. His cockpit was silent, a stark contrast to the screaming comms of the GDI and Nod forces nearby. A notification pulsed on his screen—a direct priority override from the Senate.

Warning: GDI and Black Hand engagement expanding. High probability of intercept. Authorization to utilize lethal force if the convoy is compromised. Protect the civilians at all costs.

Sonders keyed his short-range comms.

All units, this is Sonders. High Command confirms the locals are tearing each other's throats out, but they're drifting into our lane. We are no longer in 'low-profile' mode.

Outside, the GUI escort shifted into a combat-ready formation. The Riflemen and Grenadiers checked the charge levels on their pulse-rifles, their power-armor hissing as it pressurized. The Coyote light buggies—the fastest units on land—pivoted their machine guns, their sensors searching for any sign of a GDI Predator tank. Flanking the civilian transports were the Armadillos. These massive multipurpose combat vehicles hummed as they cycled their modular systems, prepared to deploy mines to stop any pursuit or use their rapid-fire autocannons to shred incoming threats.

Above them, the sky hummed with a low, mechanical thrum. A squadron of Dragonfly light attack helicopters banked sharply. Unlike the lumbering VTOLs of the old world, these nimble rotorcraft hovered with predatory precision, their pilots locking onto thermal signatures with "Wasp" guided missiles and 14.3mm machine guns ready to provide close air support.

Stay alert, GDI thinks they're looking for a kidnapper. The Black Hand is out there looking for a fight they can actually see. If anything with a GDI eagle or a Nod scorpion gets within a kilometer of this convoy, erase it.

The convoy surged forward, a piece of the future cutting through the wreckage of the present. They didn't need cloaking fields; they had superior speed, modular firepower, and a commander who knew exactly how the "old world" fought.

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