Home / Sci-Fi / The Red Rock / Chapter 136: In the Dust, Through Amani’s Eyes
Chapter 136: In the Dust, Through Amani’s Eyes
Author: Neo Moroeng
last update2025-09-24 15:52:49
The firebase still rang in my bones. Not in my ears — that shriek of sirens had finally dulled into silence — but deeper, in marrow, in blood, as if the alarms had rewired me to always be on edge. Even after the guns went quiet and the infected scattered back into the Martian dunes, the air hummed with phantom panic.

We sat in the dust after the slaughter. Soldiers dragged the wounded to medical pods, black ichor clung to armor like tar, and the towers burned red against the desert night. No one spoke above a murmur. Even the veterans — Ka!ri, the General, Rachel with her restless eyes — looked hollowed.

I kept replaying the moment. The gate opening. The desert yawning wide like a mouth. Van Wyk glowing green in his veins, strapped down like a sacrifice. The infected bowing before him. And then Helene’s shot — a crack across everything.

The memory tasted of ash.

I had fired too. My HK416 had bucked against my shoulder, its AN/PEQ-15 lasers slicing lines across infected flesh. I rem
Neo Moroeng

Amani brings a raw, personal lens to the chaos that unfolded in the firebase ambush. Unlike the General’s command-driven account, Amani processes the same violence through memory and emotion. His recollections of his wife and the quiet rhythm of his old life stand in sharp contrast to the brutality around him, serving as a fragile defense against the erosion of identity. The infected, Velirius, even the miraculous resilience of Van Wyk — all of it passes through Amani’s filter of grief, longing, and the desperate need to preserve humanity and Khomani. The moment he recognizes a face in the background of a photo shifts the battle from external to deeply personal, reminding us that the war is not only about strategy or survival, but about the fragments of self we cling to. In Amani’s vision, memory becomes both a shield and a wound. -N.M

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