Elven Invasion
Chapter 76: Into the Iceheart
UNDERGROUND AWAKENING
The thunder of collapsing towers still echoed above, but beneath the ice, a different war began.
Captain Samuel Briggs dropped into the ravine first, his grey American mech’s boots slamming into a cavern floor of ancient crystal and stone. His thermal scanners lit up with tangled heat signatures—Elves, arcane reactors, and something else… something alive and massive. The deeper layers of the Elven fortress were no longer hiding. The collapse of the Glyph Tower had exposed their heart.
“Tunnel squad, report in,” Briggs snapped.
“Petrov team in position,” came the Russian commander’s voice, heavy and steady.
“Zhao’s snipers holding upper cliffs,” the Chinese colonel confirmed. “We'll provide overwatch and coordinate fire through satellite uplink.”
“Shields extended underground,” said Commander Arjun Mehta calmly. “We have a mobile barrier generator ready to deploy in breach zones.”
Briggs’s mech stalked through the widening tunnels, plasma rifle humming in the dark. Around him, American stealth mechs shimmered into partial visibility—wraiths in the gloom.
“I see movement. Four contacts. Elven guards—blades drawn, spells primed.”
“Take them silently,” Briggs ordered. A second later, soft bursts of light and heat marked where suppressor rounds and blade-charges neutralized the guards. No alarms. No warnings.
But it wouldn’t last.
THE HEART OF THE FORTRESS
Further in, Petrov’s division advanced with brutal momentum. The blue-armored Russian Titans moved like glaciers—slow, unyielding, crushing everything in their path.
“Arcane seal ahead,” Petrov growled. A glowing rune-pillar blocked the corridor, pulsing with ethereal frost.
“Engineers, breach now.”
Two Russian engineers, piloting smaller utility mechs, moved forward. With electromagnetic disruptors and arc-flamers, they began dismantling the seal.
Suddenly, the tunnel flared with light.
A dozen Elven battlemages emerged from shimmering walls—cloaked by illusion, waiting for their moment.
“For Luna!” one shouted, her silver blade glowing with divine fury.
Energy surged toward Petrov’s lead mech.
“Shields up!” he barked.
The frontliners raised their arms—and took the full blast.
The armor buckled, but held. Petrov stepped forward, slamming his fist-mounted cannon into the lead mage. The impact turned her into a burst of mist.
“Break their line!”
Behind him, Indian shield mechs arrived, emerald domes projecting through the corridor as a moving wall of protection. Arjun’s voice cut through the comms:
“Push now. They’re collapsing the ceiling behind them.”
Explosives detonated. Rocks and ice fell—but Arjun’s mechs raised shields high, holding the tunnel aloft.
Petrov’s men surged forward, slaughtering the retreating mages before they could regroup. The engineers resumed their work and shattered the seal.
Briggs’ voice came through.
“We’re inside the control node. Looks like a… chapel? No. A command nexus. Magical maps, leyline diagrams, power sources…”
“I have visual,” Zhao Wei said. “The fortress core. You’re close.”
THE INNER SANCTUM
Briggs entered the chamber—vaulted and ancient, illuminated by crystalline veins in the walls. In the center stood a circular platform inscribed with High Elven runes. Hovering above it was a spherical construct of silver and crystal, pulsing like a heart.
Arjun’s voice came in. “That’s the Iceheart Core. It powers the entire second fortress. Destroying it could collapse this region… but also disrupt the southern leyline shield.”
“Risky,” Briggs muttered. “But we didn’t come here to tiptoe.”
As he approached, the core flared with lunar magic.
From hidden alcoves around the chamber, Royal Elven Sentinels emerged—tall, silver-haired, clad in divine armor. Unlike their common brethren, they didn’t shout or scream. They moved like silent death.
One raised her hand, and a blast of lunar fire struck Briggs square in the chest. Shields crackled, systems flickered, but his mech held.
“Contact!” Briggs yelled, diving for cover behind a fallen column. “Need support now!”
“I’m on my way,” Arjun said.
Zhao’s snipers began firing from cliff-mounted artillery—energy rounds carving through the upper tunnels and dropping rubble over the Sentinels’ heads.
Petrov barreled into the room moments later, slamming one Royal Sentinel into a wall hard enough to crack the stone. “Let’s end this.”
The fight was vicious. The Royal Sentinels used teleportation glyphs, divine shields, and devastating sword techniques that cut into even the reinforced armor of Earth’s mechs. One by one, they fell—but not without cost.
Two stealth mechs were torn apart. A Russian heavy lost an arm. Briggs’ systems went red across half his HUD.
But in the end, the last Sentinel fell with a whispered prayer to Luna.
Arjun entered as the dust settled.
“Let’s overload the core,” Briggs said, stepping onto the platform.
Zhao’s voice came in: “Satellite has the southern leyline in full view. Disabling this core will expose half the remaining defense.”
“Then do it,” Arjun said.
They synchronized energy pulses from their mechs into the Iceheart Core. It resisted—screamed in divine tongues—but then cracked. Light exploded upward in a pillar that tore through the glacier’s roof.
Far above, Zhao’s snipers watched as the southern veil shattered like glass.
BACK ON THE SURFACE
High above, in the Elven command tower still under Mary’s authority, alarms screamed.
The High Elf tactician beside her paled. “The Iceheart… has fallen. The veil is gone. They’re coming.”
Mary said nothing.
Her sharp eyes stared through the magic mirror, seeing the ripple in the sky—the barrier that had kept Earth’s full assault at bay was now gone.
“Ready the third line,” she said at last. “And alert the Lunar Priestesses. We hold this ground, or we fall with it.”
THE SIGNAL HEARD ‘ROUND THE WORLD
In every military base across Earth, the moment did not go unnoticed.
In orbit, satellite feed confirmed: the second Elven fortress was no longer shielded. The magical veil was broken.
Admirals and generals cheered.
In New Delhi, Admiral Chauhan turned to his staff.
“Tell every commander: the path is open. Begin full deployment.”
In Washington, in Beijing, in Moscow, in Tokyo—orders were given. Thousands of reinforcements were prepped. Bombers and carriers surged forward. Mechs were awakened from cryo-locks.
The final assault would come next.
But in that frozen, sacred chamber deep within the glacier, the first true victory had already been won.
Briggs, Petrov, Zhao, and Arjun stood atop the broken Iceheart, their battered mechs silhouetted in divine light.
“The tide,” Briggs whispered, “has turned.”