The bunker was buried in a heavy stillness as the midnight hours rolled in. Outside, the torrential downpour continued to lash against the mountain, the muffled roar of the storm barely registering through the feet of reinforced concrete and soil overhead.
Inside the living quarters, the low, rhythmic hum of the air filtration system was the only constant sound.
Lin Qing sat at the edge of the tal cot, her body enveloped in a faint, dull ache. She had told Han Ye they would rest for the night, and she ant it—she knew the absolute value of physical recovery before entering a theater of operations. But sleep was a luxury her mind wouldn’t allow just yet.
She extended her right hand, watching the faint, microscopic tremor in her fingers as she slowly flexed them into a fist.
’This body’s limits are worse than I calculated,’ she thought, her jaw tightening in silent irritation. ’The reaction ti is acceptable, but the threshold for physical exhaustion is dangerously low.’
The explosive burst of adrenaline from a few hours prior—the sprint, the low-profile slide across the slick porch boards, and the raw kinetic force required to smash a heavy shotgun hilt into a grown man’s jaw—had completely drained the body’s imdiate energy stores.
Her lungs still carried a phantom tightness, and the muscles in her lower back were stiffening. In her previous life as an elite special forces dic, an engagent of that scale wouldn’t have even raised her heart rate.
Here, she was fighting against a baseline civilian physiology that thought a light jog once a week was elite conditioning.
Unable to force her restless mind to sleep, Lin Qing stood up, her combat boots clicking softly against the floor as she walked toward the heavy, industrial vault door at the back of the corridor.
It was ti to count their resources.
When she spun the cold iron chanical wheel and pushed the vault open, the clean, white glow of independent overhead LED strips illuminated a space designed for absolute survival. Lin Qing stepped inside, her sharp eyes scanning the neat, organized layout.
The resource managent here was staggering. Stacked systematically on heavy-duty industrial pallets were crates of military-grade MREs (als, Ready-to-Eat), sealed containers of compressed grain, and rows of high-density water purification units.
On the adjacent steel shelving sat boxes of professional dical supplies—trauma kits, sterile surgical instrunts, and vacuum-sealed antibiotics. Whoever had funded this bunker hadn’t just prepared for a temporary crisis; they had built a fortress ant to sustain life through a prolonged siege.
Moving to the central weapon bench, Lin Qing began pulling down the matte-black hardware from the steel racks, her movents fluid and chanical.
"Four Type-95 assault rifles," she muttered, her voice cold, flat, and analytical as she laid the weapons out on the stainless-steel table. "chanisms are entirely clean. Heavy composite stocks, chambered in standard 5.8mm. Six spare thirty-round magazines per rifle."
She reached into a lower crate, snapping open a heavy dual-latched plastic case to reveal a row of sleek, black tactical daggers and four high-fragntation defensive hand grenades nestled perfectly in custom-cut foam.
Alongside them lay two tactical 12-gauge shotguns with folding stocks and three boxes of heavy, brass-rimd buckshot shells.
A shadow shifted near the armory entrance. Lin Qing didn’t jump; her periter awareness had already picked up the tiny footsteps approaching the room.
Han Ye stood at the threshold, his small five-year-old body perfectly rigid. His dark, bottomless eyes tracked the gleaming rows of steel and iron on the table with a mature intensity.
He wasn’t rubbing his eyes, and he didn’t look sleepy. He looked entirely detached from the typical vulnerability of a child his age, his calculated gaze fixing onto her inventory.
"The shotguns are useless for our current physical paraters," Lin Qing stated, not looking up as she slid a fresh 9mm magazine into her sidearm until it clicked into place with a crisp, chanical snap.
"The recoil on a 12-gauge will punish this body’s unconditioned shoulder joint too heavily right now, reducing my accuracy for consecutive shots. We leave those as baseline periter defense for the bunker. The primary rifles and the sidearms are our only viable options for a high-mobility deploynt when we move out tomorrow."
"You’re planning a raid, not a scouting mission," Han Ye said softly. His voice didn’t carry the high-pitched cadence of an innocent toddler; it was a flat, asuring rumble. He was adjusting to the reality of his situation, his mind working through the implications of the woman standing before him.
"In war, if you sit defensively inside an isolated outpost and wait for an organized enemy to find you, you’re just executing yourself on a delayed tir," Lin Qing replied, her sharp eyes scanning the weapon bench.
"Those three thugs outside belonged to a larger syndicate. If their scout team doesn’t report back by tomorrow morning, they will send a heavier detachnt up this mountain path with armored vehicles or tracking gear. Our location will be blown. The only logical move is a devastating offense."
She turned her head slightly, her gaze locking onto Han Ye’s tiny, frozen face. "Based on the way your expression turned into stone when I ntioned the na ’Black Ridge Sanctuary’ on that map earlier, I’m guessing you know what kind of garbage human beings are running that camp. Or at least, you’ve realized they aren’t a charity rescue committee."
Han Ye’s tiny fists clenched inside his pockets. He didn’t offer an explanation, and he didn’t falter under her intense gaze.
He was a cold survivalist, and he had already accepted the brutal rules of this new world. Black Ridge was a nest of predators—people who treated the weak like cattle. If they were allowed to expand their territory up this mountain, they would eventually beco an unmanageable threat to his own existence.
"They are monsters," Han Ye spit out, his voice dripping with a calm, venomous certainty. "They shouldn’t be allowed to exist."
Lin Qing’s lips curved into a sharp, dangerous, soldier’s smirk. It wasn’t a comforting, gentle smile ant to soothe a child. It was the predatory grin of a commander who had just identified a mutual target.
"Good. Then we are entirely on the sa page," Lin Qing said, her voice dropping into a low, deadly pitch. "We clear our periter, we secure their supplies, and I’ll let you watch them burn."
Before Han Ye could respond, the looted walkie-talkie resting on the table suddenly hissed violently to life, shattering the peace of the vault.
CRACKLE... WIIIIING...
A burst of harsh, distorted static cut through the room, making the speakers vibrate.
Han Ye imdiately stepped closer to the console, his small hand hovering over the volu dial, turning it down just enough to keep the audio confined to their imdiate vicinity while maintaining an absolute lock on the encrypted channel.
The voice that tore through the speaker wasn’t the calm, authoritative tone of the base commander they had intercepted earlier. This voice was frantic, ragged, and backgrounded by a deafening, chaotic symphony of distant screaming, shattering glass, and heavy automatic gunfire.
"...Alpha team! Qiang, co in, damn it!" the voice scread, coughing violently against a backdrop of roaring engine noises. "If you can hear this, do not co back down to the valley basin! The hospital quarantine sectors just completely collapsed ten minutes ago! The mutated creatures! They aren’t stopping, they don’t feel the bullets, and they are tearing the guards apart!".
Lin Qing froze, her fingers stopping mid-motion on her rifle strap as she leaned in toward the speaker, her eyes narrowing into cold slits.
"The lower periter walls at the trading post have been breached by a crowd from the highway!" the radio transmission continued, the speaker’s voice cracking into pure, unadulterated panic. "The whole base is in a goddamn crossfire! If you have secured that cabin on the mountain, hold it! I repeat, hold the high ground and lock the gates! Do not co back to the—"
BOOM!
A massive, muffled explosion echoed through the small receiver, followed by the sound of tearing tal and a barrage of panicked, high-caliber gunfire.
Through the tiny speaker, Han Ye and Lin Qing could clearly hear a wet, sickening tearing noise, followed by a low, guttural, inhuman howl that sounded entirely animalistic.
Then, the line cut out permanently, returning to a flat, empty hiss of pure white static.
The armory fell back into a heavy, suffocating silence. The evolutionary explosion of the virus—the sudden, coordinated mutation that turned the patients into an unstoppable, aggressive horde—was hitting the valley floor right now.
The gradual outbreak that the authorities had tried to downplay as a manageable dical ergency had officially transitioned into a swift, absolute apocalypse in a matter of a few days.
Han Ye slowly let out his breath, his young face returning to a mask of intense calculation. The ’sanctuary’ hadn’t been attacked this ti in his last life but many things had changed and he guessed that this was probably one of them.
He looked at the dead radio, then up at Lin Qing. The operational landscape had just been completely rewritten, shattering their plans for a morning departure.
"The defenses at Black Ridge are failing," Han Ye whispered, his dark eyes flashing. "If we go down there now, we won’t just be fighting the syndicate. We will be walking directly into a live infection zone."
Lin Qing didn’t show a single flicker of hesitation. She slung the rifle over her shoulder, adjusting the strap until the weapon sat perfectly against her back.
"An infection zone is just a battlefield with fluid paraters, kid," Lin Qing said, her voice smooth, steady, and entirely devoid of fear. "If the syndicate is currently distracted, fighting for their lives against a breakthrough horde, their internal security will be at absolute zero. Their primary armories will be unlocked, their supplies will be entirely exposed, and their leadership will be completely vulnerable to a flank attack."
She stepped down from the bench, her combat boots clicking sharply against the concrete as she looked down at the future villain.
"This changes nothing. In fact, it makes our job significantly easier. We aren’t just going down there to raid them anymore. We are going to clean up the scraps of a dying empire before the horde consus everything of value. Grab the map, check the radio lines, and get ready. We changed the schedule. We are moving out right now."
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