Field Master Rel 'Suranamee stood at the prow of his Phantom, gazing down at the burning city of Arcadia as his forces swarmed below. The pungent stench of scorched earth and plasma hung in the air, carried on the winds of war. He felt nothing as he observed the carnage—a necessary sacrifice to fulfill the Covenant's holy mission. Arcadia was but one more step toward the Great Journey, a step drenched in the blood of these pitiful humans.
At Rel's side, a Minor Sangheili stood ready, his posture rigid with the reverence due to a Field Master. The Minor waited for permission to speak, his mandibles twitching in anticipation.
"Speak," Rel said, his deep voice rumbling like distant thunder.
"Field Master, our ground forces report progress. The humans are retreating in some sectors, but the infidels at the spaceport are mounting fierce resistance. Several of our Wraiths have been destroyed, and Ghost patrols have failed to clear the enemy from the plaza."
Rel's eyes narrowed beneath his helmet. "The Demon?"
The Minor hesitated, his head bowing slightly. "Yes, Field Master. A single Spartan was confirmed to have led the counterattack. It is said the humans revere these Demons as their greatest warriors. This one has slain many."
Rel growled low in his throat. A Spartan—a Demon. He had encountered them before in other battles, and each time they had proven to be formidable foes. Their strength was unnatural, their cunning impressive. But they were still mortal, still fragile beneath their armor.
"The humans cling to their false hope, as they always do," Rel said, his voice dripping with disdain. "A Demon is but a distraction, nothing more. The Covenant's will is unshakable, and we will cleanse this world of their filth."
Rel turned from the observation window to face the command center inside his Phantom. His warriors—Sangheili, Jiralhanae, and the lesser species—moved with discipline as they prepared for the next phase of the assault. They knew what was at stake, and they feared nothing, for they fought in service to the Forerunners and the promise of the Great Journey.
"Prepare the next wave of reinforcements," Rel commanded. "I will lead them personally."
The Minor blinked, surprised. "Field Master, your presence on the battlefield—"
"Is necessary," Rel finished for him, his tone brooking no argument. "This Spartan must be dealt with. We will crush their resistance and show these humans the futility of defying the Covenant."
The Minor bowed low, acknowledging the order, before turning to relay the Field Master's command. Within moments, the Phantom's bay doors opened, and the roar of Covenant thrusters filled the air as dropships descended toward the city below.
Rel stood still, his hands clasped behind his back as the city came into sharper focus. The burning buildings, the ruined streets, and the pitiful remnants of human defense—all of it a testament to their inevitable failure. The humans were resilient, yes, but their defiance would crumble beneath the might of the Covenant's holy resolve.
As the dropships approached their landing zone, Rel's mind drifted briefly to thoughts of honor and duty. He had served the Covenant faithfully for many cycles, ascending through the ranks by displaying loyalty, strength, and unquestioning belief in the Prophets' words. The Great Journey awaited all faithful servants, and Rel would not falter in his pursuit of salvation. But the Demon—this Spartan—stood in the way of that sacred goal.
The Phantom shuddered as it touched down near the spaceport's outer perimeter. Rel moved swiftly, his heavy boots thudding against the metallic floor as he disembarked with his warriors. The air was thick with the sounds of battle—plasma fire, human weapons, and the death cries of those who fell in the name of the Covenant.
Grunts, Unggoy, scrambled forward, their high-pitched voices shouting as they hurried to fortify positions. Several Kig-Yar snipers took up perches along the rooftops, their energy shields flickering in the fading sunlight. Jiralhanae warriors grunted nearby, eager for the chance to test their strength against the humans.
But it was the Sangheili who stood at the heart of the Covenant's advance. Clad in shimmering armor, they moved with purpose, their energy swords crackling with lethal intent.
Rel's voice cut through the chaos, amplified by his armor's systems. "Warriors of the Covenant, hear me! The time has come to finish what we started. This human world will fall, and we will offer its ashes to the Prophets as a sign of our devotion!"
A chorus of roars and hisses greeted his words, the fervor of the Covenant rising to a fever pitch.
"We will not be denied!" Rel bellowed, raising his arm in a gesture of command. "We march to glory!"
The Sangheili warriors fell into formation, their discipline and honor reflected in every movement. Rel strode forward at their head, leading them into the city streets toward the spaceport where the humans had dug in.
As they approached the human fortifications, Rel could see the flashes of gunfire and the brilliant green light of Covenant plasma weapons exchanging across the battlefield. A human warthog skidded around a corner, its mounted machine gun barking as it strafed the Covenant lines. Unggoy scrambled for cover, many of them cut down by the weapon's relentless fire. But the Sangheili pressed forward, firing their plasma rifles with deadly precision.
"Focus your fire on the vehicles!" Rel ordered.
A pair of Hunters lumbered forward, their fuel rod cannons glowing with power. They aimed at the Warthog and fired in unison. The human vehicle was engulfed in a brilliant explosion, its smoking wreckage flipping end over end before crashing into a nearby building.
Still, the humans held their ground, their defense stubborn and unyielding. Rel's eyes narrowed as he scanned the battlefield. Where was the Demon? He had expected the Spartan to make its presence known by now, to emerge as a threat that needed to be dealt with.
As if in answer to his thoughts, his motion tracker blipped, showing movement on his flank. He turned just in time to see a flash of green armor—Spartan armor—charging toward him from the shadows of a destroyed building.
The Demon moved with impossible speed, barreling through a squad of Sangheili, its shotgun booming as it fired. One Sangheili fell instantly, its shields flaring and failing as it crumpled to the ground. The others tried to regroup, but the Spartan was already upon them, its armored fist striking with the force of a hammer.
Rel growled in anger, his hand going to the hilt of his energy sword. With a swift motion, the blade ignited, casting a blue glow around him as he charged toward the Spartan.
The Demon turned, its visor locking onto Rel with cold, calculating intent. For a moment, time seemed to slow, the battlefield around them fading into the background. It was just the two of them—Sangheili and Spartan, locked in the eternal dance of war.
Rel swung his energy sword in a wide arc, the blade sizzling through the air. The Spartan dodged with precision, rolling out of the way as the blade missed by mere inches. The Demon countered with a shotgun blast, but Rel's shields absorbed the hit, though they flared with the strain.
"You fight well, human," Rel snarled, his voice distorted by his helmet's speakers. "But you will fall, as all your kind must."
The Spartan said nothing, only reloading its shotgun and preparing for another attack.
They clashed again, blade against gun, warrior against warrior. The Spartan was fast—faster than Rel had anticipated—but he was no novice in battle. Each of the Demon's strikes was met with an equal and opposite force, his energy sword deflecting the shotgun's blasts with a shower of sparks.
The battle raged around them, but Rel was focused entirely on the Spartan. This was no ordinary foe; this was the peak of human combat prowess, the very thing the Covenant sought to wipe from existence. And yet, in this moment, Rel could feel a strange sense of respect for the Demon.
But respect would not stay his blade. The Spartan would fall, and the Covenant's holy mission would continue.
With a roar, Rel lunged forward, bringing his sword down in a deadly arc aimed at the Spartan's chest. The Demon blocked the strike, its shotgun caught between the energy blade and its armor. For a split second, they were locked in a test of strength, each warrior pushing against the other, their weapons sparking and groaning under the strain.
But the Spartan was clever. It pivoted at the last second, letting Rel's momentum carry him forward as the Demon slipped out of reach. Before Rel could recover, the Spartan planted a plasma grenade on his chest, the sticky bomb attaching itself to his armor with a chilling hiss.
Rel stared down at the glowing grenade, realization dawning too late.
The explosion tore through his shields, ripping his armor apart and sending him crashing to the ground. Pain surged through him, his vision dimming as the battlefield faded into a blur of lights and sounds.
As his life ebbed away, Rel 'Suranamee could only think of one thing—the Great Journey, and how he had been denied his place in its sacred path.
The Demon had won this battle.
But the war was far from over.