Prologue - 7:30.
It was seven twenty-three, and they'd be here soon. If they would come tonight it would be at seven thirty, like clockwork.
She didn't know why; Maybe they feasted before they attacked, or, maybe they thought that the timing would give them a sort of tactical advantage; The sunset at their backs confusing the defenders.
Let them think that. She allowed herself a slight smirk, despite her fatigue; A meaningless movement of the lips that would normally indicate some sort of feeling of pleasure. She did not. In fact, the emotion that ran through to her core was that of cold, steely resolve; There was no pleasure in her work, she reassured herself, this was a job. This was her means of survival, she silently reminded herself as she pressed her icy, blue eye to the scope of her rifle.
Despite the network of scars that blemished her face and body, she was beautiful; At just nineteen, her scarce friends, co-workers, assured her that pre-war, she could have been a movie star or model; Nothing she had any desire to be. Her untidy, raven-black hair was tied in a short, messy pony-tail that hung out from underneath what had been a military style cap dyed in a urban camouflage pattern, now discolored and faded into a dull light gray. The rest of her clothing told a similar story of age and wear; The tactical vest she used to carry extra ammunition, which she had removed for comfort in her prone position, was ripped in several places, and the velcro was useless. Her originally white tank-top was stained with dirt and sweat, having gone a while without being washed; It was too small as well, barely able to contain her upper-body. Slightly torn, in some places tattered, fatigue pants tucked into old, leather boots that were almost comically large on her.
Her appearance hardly mattered, though, she lay prone, concealing herself by laying inside of a storm-drain, looking out across the vacant parking lot. Seven twenty-eight.
She didn't understand why they had to defend this place. It was an empty, bombed out ware-house, with a hole in the wall big enough for three super-mutants, standing on each other's shoulders, to fit through. Sure, there was a small "settlement" here, a mockery of civilization, but there were hundreds, if not thousands, of derelict [censored]-holes like this across the wastes; What mattered though, was that Peter, the leader of their band of mercenaries, was being payed, and that meant in turn, that she was being payed as well. The occupants, who she never spoke to, much preferring to keep to herself, must be interesting though, because the raiders attacked this village even more frequently than they would anything else that showed a sign of life.
She'd been sitting in that hole, laying in the same exact position, for nearly fourteen hours now. She barely moved, the quintessence of patience and discipline. She barely breathed, calm and methodical. She barely thought, not distracting herself. She barely blinked, cold eyes glued to her scope, waiting for any movement. She was like a statue; She was a sniper, and she was a good one.
Seven thirty, and just like clockwork, they came. She heard a symphony of screams: a wild battle-cry, and several bangs as shots were fired aimlessly into the air. They rose from their cover in a ditch on the far-end of the parking lot, and rushed forward. Most wielded home-made knives, make-shift clubs, or whatever else they could get their hands-on, although one or two had fire-arms. There were about fifteen of them, and from the very second the rose, the sniper brought the first one into her sights. She squeezed the trigger, and her rifle cracked, hurling lead at her target. The bullet ripped through the man's abdomen, and he collapsed mid-stride, screaming. She centered her cross-hair on the next target, and she thought she heard the woman's head pop as her left eye exploded. They weren't even half-way across the parking lot, as another slug punched a hole clean-through a large, black man wielding a pistol.
It was clear they had no idea where the shots were coming from, the setting-sun working against them as it disguised her muzzle-flash. The sniper fired again and again. They were three quarters of the way there, and down nine members, when, presumably their leader, screamed out the order to retreat. The entire group halted, turning and running for safety as fast as their legs could carry them. One man slipped as he tried to turn at a full sprint; Just as the rifle cracked again, and his left leg ripped from his body. The man who gave the order to retreat fell to his knees, clutching his bleeding throat after a bullet passed through it, only for another to drill into the back of his head.
The survivors dived into the ditch from which they came. They would crawl in safety until out of sight, and be back in a few days, with a fresh new gang of desperate souls with nothing to lose. The sniper had four hours left on watch, although she knew there would not be another attack tonight. She took a sip of 'coffee' from a thermos at her side, struggling to swallow the drink; It looked like muddy water, and tasted like turpentine.
They'd be back in a couple of days, at seven thirty, ready for another attack. The sniper cleared her throat, rubbing her eyes from fatigue as she briefly smiled once more; She'd be waiting for them, just like clockwork. She had enough bullets for all of them.