The heavy steel bumper of the military SUV crushed the skull of a roaming zombie, the wet, sickening snap echoing loudly through the overgrown courtyard of the suburban mansion.
Han Zheng cut the engine, and the sudden silence inside the cabin felt heavier and far more suffocating than the roaring thunderstorm outside. He sat gripping the steering wheel, his knuckles stark white against the worn leather, his eyes heavily bloodshot from days of sleepless, unyielding driving.
He and his team had not seen this apocalypse coming. They weren’t prepared for it, they hadn’t predicted the sudden, total collapse of the central governnt, and they certainly hadn’t expected the dead to rise from the pavent and start tearing human flesh apart.
In the very beginning, they had fought with standard, by-the-book military tactics, attempting to establish quarantine periters and save every civilian they encountered. But the rules of the world had changed overnight, throwing them into a brutal, bloody learning curve where hesitation ant a grueso death.
They had watched good n die in the streets, fought through claustrophobic city sectors choked with burning vehicles, and constantly scrambled just to scavenge for clean water, canned rations, and precious siphoned fuel. Every single day had beco a relentless, exhausting cycle of killing and surviving.
Things had only changed when the anomalies began to manifest within their bodies.
Four mbers of his remaining elite team, including Han Zheng himself, had awakened strange, unexplainable abilities that defied modern science. For Han Zheng, the awakening manifested as a sudden, explosive increase in his physical strength and sensory awareness. His reflexes were sharper than a wild predator’s, his muscle density had multiplied, and his bare strikes carried enough raw force to shatter solid concrete walls. His three other awakened n had developed their own unique physical and elental enhancents, turning them from ordinary elite soldiers into lethal, superhuman combatants.
With these newly discovered powers, survival on the lawless roads had finally beco manageable. They had managed to secure two more armored military SUVs from a deserted provincial outpost, ticulously packing all three massive vehicles to the absolute brim with food, dical kits, and extra fuel canisters.
But even with their supernatural powers and stacked supplies, the road remained an absolute nightmare. The zombies were constantly evolving, growing faster, smarter, and far more aggressive by the day, leaving Han Zheng’s n with deep scars, broken bones, and agonizingly close calls. Thankfully, through sheer discipline and unyielding luck, no one on his imdiate team had died since the awakening.
But the monsters weren’t the only threat waiting for them on the cracked highways. Desperate civilians and ard criminal gangs alike had tried absolutely everything to halt their progress. So begged for rcy on their knees in the middle of the road, using starving children as bait; others threatened them from the shadows with guns and makeshift spikes.
Early on, a few of his n had still been soft-hearted, clinging to the morals of the old world. Against Han Zheng’s stricter, more pragmatic instincts, the team had actively argued to let a shivering, crying teenage boy ride in the back of one of their trucks after finding him in an abandoned gas station.
That single act of rcy almost cost them everything. The very next night, while the camp slept, the teenager had pulled a hidden blade, viciously stabbing one of the sleeping soldiers in the side.
He stole a heavy duffel bag filled with dical supplies and ammunition before vanishing into the pitch-black woods. The soldier had barely survived the deep puncture wound, but the team’s naivety died entirely that night. From then on, they drove right past every single outstretched hand, their windows rolled up tight and their expressions locked in stone.
The n were completely exhausted, their bodies aching and their minds fractured by the constant horrors. They wanted nothing more than to find a quiet, fortified structure, lock the heavy doors, and just rest for a week without looking over their shoulders.
But Han Zheng refused to stop. His wife, Lin Qing, and his five-year-old son, Han Ye, were out there sowhere, and he refused to freeze in place until he knew their status. Loyal to their commander and recognizing the burning fury in his eyes, the n agreed to push south, cutting a bloody path through the chaos until they finally reached the gates of the family’s private mansion.
But as the three military SUVs idled in the long, sweeping driveway, Han Zheng’s heart sank into his stomach.
Several zombies were wandering aimlessly across the manicured front lawn, their clothes torn and their feet dragging heavily through the overgrown grass. It was an imdiate, sickening sign that clawed at Han Zheng’s chest. If the outer periter was breached and the gates were swinging open, what had happened to the people inside?
"Clear the house," Han Zheng commanded, his voice dead, raspy, and devoid of any warmth. "Kill everything that moves."
The heavy vehicle doors flew open simultaneously. The four awakened soldiers moved into the structure with terrifying, practiced efficiency, their weapons drawn and their minds entirely focused on the sweep.
Han Zheng stepped through the shattered glass of the front entrance, instantly dodging the clumsy, aggressive swipe of a decayed butler zombie that had once managed his estate.
With a single, fluid motion of his arm, he drove his heavy combat knife upward through the creature’s jaw. His awakened physical strength sent the steel blade cleanly through the top of its skull with terrifying force. To his left and right, his n cleared the main foyer and the wide kitchen, the muffled thuds of hand-to-hand combat and silenced gunshots echoing dully through the cavernous mansion.
Within ten minutes, the entire estate was brought to a complete, dead silence. The dark, unmoving bodies of the infected lay scattered across the expensive marble floors, their black blood pooling on the clean tile.
Han Zheng sprinted up the grand staircase, his heart hamring against his ribs like a trapped animal. He tore open the master bedroom door, checked the nursery, and slamd his palms into the desk of his private study.
"Lin Qing! Han Ye!" he shouted, his voice cracking with a rare, terrifying wave of panic that he had never allowed his n to see.
There was no answer. The rooms were completely empty, covered in a very thin, undisturbed layer of settling dust. There were no obvious signs of a violent struggle, no blood splatters painting the walls, and no signs of a desperate last stand, but the absolute, echoing void of life made Han Zheng’s knees buckle.
He dropped heavily to the floor in the center of the vacant living room, the weight of the last few weeks crashing down on him all at once.
A suffocating, crushing wave of devastation and utter hopelessness washed over him. He had dragged his team through the depths of hell, fought through thousands of horrific monsters, and completely hardened his heart against the pleading cries of dying civilians just to find an empty, dead house.
He felt completely hollowed out from the inside, staring blankly at the floorboards as a dark, dangerous despair began to take root in his mind. Had he been too late? Had they been dragged away into the dark?
Driven by a mounting panic, he sprinted out of the bedroom and into his private study. He didn’t waste ti looking at the dusty desk. Instead, he approached the hidden bookshelf chanism, triggering the latch to open the concealed room. He stepped into the dark, hidden space, his eyes frantically searching the shelves for any clue.
That was when his eyes locked onto a small piece of discarded plastic sitting on the shelf. He picked it up and held it under the dim light of his flashlight. It was the crumpled, discarded wrapper of a sweet, milk-flavored bun—the exact, specific brand that Lin Qing always bought from the local market for their son because it was the only one the boy would eat without complaining.
He also searched the entire master bedroom again and saw the dead zombie in the bathroom which he had missed before as it was partially hidden behind the shower glass.
A sudden, violent jolt of adrenaline shot straight through his veins, setting his heart ablaze.
Han Zheng turned on his heel and sprinted toward the back staircase, tearing down the steps into the lower garage levels three at a ti. He slamd his hand against the wall switch, throwing the massive underground parking space into the dim, artificial glow of the ergency backup lights.
The primary parking bay was completely empty. His personal, heavily modified civilian SUV—the one he had reinforced specifically for cross-country travel before his last deploynt—was gone.
Han Zheng stared at the empty, clean concrete floor, a breathless, disbelieving laugh suddenly escaping his throat. The keys and the car were completely missing.
Against all odds, his delicate wife had sohow managed to protect their son, get down to this garage, and escape the property before the infected could ever overwhelm the main grounds. She had taken the car and fled into the wasteland.
He clenched his massive fists tightly, the paralyzing hopelessness evaporating from his system instantly, replaced by a fierce, burning spark of absolute, unyielding determination. They were alive. They were out there sowhere on the road, running, just like he was.
Turning back toward the concrete stairs where his exhausted n were waiting for his orders, Han Zheng’s eyes turned razor-sharp, the dead look completely vanishing from his face.
"Pack the vehicles and check the maps," he ordered loudly, his commanding voice booming through the empty garage. "They made it out alive. We keep moving south."
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