Whitezilla vanished. Optical camouflage that even heat sensors couldn’t track. A whisper of white static, then crack —the leader’s arm was broken in three places, the knife clattering to the wet ground. Whitezilla scooped the girl into his arms. Her tears mixed with the rain.
“Who… who are you?” she whispered. whitezilla
Three stories down, he landed between the two parties, cracking the asphalt. The Lotus’s enforcers opened fire with plasma rifles. Whitezilla moved like a blizzard given violence. His left arm—a custom-built “Aegis Shroud”—deployed a shimmering white shield that absorbed their shots. His right hand transformed into a sonic cannon. Whitezilla vanished
She did. He leaped—hydraulic legs launching him six stories high, over the Lotus’s backup squad, over the burning cars, landing silently on a rooftop a quarter-mile away. He set the girl down beside a waiting auto-ambulance. Whitezilla scooped the girl into his arms
“Close your eyes,” he said, his voice a gentle, synthesized hum.
One night, the sky over Sector-7 wept acid rain. Whitezilla stood atop a derelict mag-lev train, watching a hostage exchange below: the Crimson Lotus yakuza trading a quantum decryption chip for a kidnapped senator’s daughter. The girl was nine years old. Her eyes were the size of moons.
Whitezilla didn’t negotiate. He fell .