The oppressive stench of blood and copper hung heavy in the damp air of the ruined general store. Outside in the square, the elite squad was operating in rapid, silent synchronization.
Inside the shop, Han Zheng stood by the shattered brickwork, his fra casting a long shadow over the massive, dead bull.
"The blood trail from the square has completely painted this coordinate point," Han Zheng stated, his deep voice heavy with a grim, exhausting weight.
He looked at the brickwork, then back at the twelve trembling villagers holding each other near the open cellar door. "The necrotic fluid from the herd is sinking into the local water table. It might draw scavenger mutations straight down here. This village is no longer survivable."
Guo Jiong tightened his grip on his rifle, his face hardening as he looked down at his small daughter clinging tightly to jacket. He knew the Commander was right. Their fragile sanctuary was entirely gone.
Han Zheng ran a tense hand over his face. His jaw was tightly locked, his dark eyes betraying a deep, internal conflict. Every instinct in his gut scread at him to throw these people into the trucks, but the cold mathematics of command held him back.
Xiao Li was still physically drained from the siphon attack, and their heavy military transports were already pushed to their weight limits with the seeds. Taking extra mouths on a long journey through a volatile, unfolding cataclysm was a death sentence for everyone involved.
He hated the calculation, but he had to protect his squad. He slowly turned toward the door, his voice thick with a forced neutrality. "Load the remaining seed cargo. We roll out in ten minutes."
He was trying to harden his heart, bracing himself for the crushing guilt of leaving them behind.
"We aren’t leaving them here to rot."
The voice cut through the room like a frost.
Han Zheng stopped dead in his tracks. He slowly turned his head, his dark eyes widening in a flash of genuine surprise.
Lin Qing stood perfectly straight near the overturned wooden counter, her rifle resting casually over her uninjured shoulder. Her pale face remained an unreadable, stoic mask, her dark eyes completely unblinking as she looked directly at her husband.
"Leaving them here compromises our trailing security," Lin Qing stated smoothly to help him bypass his dilemma. "If the Syndicate mbers find them and learn about us, they might close the southern highway exit we require. We need a diversion or a secure containnt point to drop them off."
Han Zheng stared at his wife, quiet relief washing over his chest, quickly followed by a surge of admiration. Since the world had collapsed, he had only ever seen Lin Qing’s fiercely cold, lethal, and hyper-vigilant side. Yet here she was, using her logic to give him the exact justification he desperately needed to save these people without compromising his duty to the squad.
She was covering for his conscience.
A genuine, proud smile finally broke through the Commander’s grim expression. "A containnt point. Do you have a location in mind?" Han Zheng asked, turning his gaze toward Guo Jiong with a renewed, sharp focus.
Guo Jiong’s breath hitched in his throat, a sudden surge of overwhelming hope flashing across his weathered face. He looked at Lin Qing with deep, profound gratitude before barking out an answer.
"Yes! There’s an old forestry administration outpost up in the northern ridge—about ten miles off the secondary road. It’s built entirely out of reinforced concrete, surrounded by a heavy, ten-foot chain-link fence ant to keep out large wildlife. I used to stay there for weeks during the winter tracking seasons. It’s isolated, highly defensible, and has a natural spring well."
"Is it clear?" Han Zheng asked, his mind instantly analyzing the geography.
"It was completely empty before the cataclysm hit," Guo Jiong node vigorously. "The infected won’t wander up into the high timber lines unless they are actively tracking a massive noise."
Lin Qing nodded once, a sharp, decisive movent. "Then we move."
Before they left the office, Guo Jiong stepped toward the iron safe in the manager’s back room. Working the heavy tumbler, he swung the door open and pulled out three highly sealed, vacuum-packed aluminum canisters.
"This is what I promised," Guo Jiong said hoarsely, handing them directly to Han Zheng. "These aren’t the standard field crops. These are the Tier 1 high-yield, genetically stabilized strains from the agricultural experintal lab. They are worth more than gold."
Han Zheng took the heavy canisters, his eyes flashing with satisfaction as he handed them to Lin Qing, who secured them safely into her pack.
The evacuation was rapid and calculated. Outside, parked beneath a canvas tarp behind the store, was Guo Jiong’s personal vehicle—an old, rugged station wagon.
Under Han Zheng’s strict supervision, the squad began loading the civilian group. They packed the station wagon’s rear bed to its absolute physical limits. The remaining surplus of the seed cargo was cleanly integrated into the elite squad’s heavy military trucks.
"Convoy formation, assu escort velocity," Han Zheng ordered, leaping into the command seat of the lead vehicle. "Keep the civilian wagon dead center. Watch the tree lines."
The ten-mile drive was tense, but the journey remained completely undisturbed. The heavy rumble of the military transport hulls acted as a protective shield, clearing away the occasional stray, low-level infected.
When the convoy finally breached the high ridge, the forestry outpost ca into view. It was exactly as Guo Jiong had described—a solid, low-profile concrete bunker nestled deeply against a sheer rock face, completely enclosed by a heavy, unyielding industrial steel fence.
"Soilders, secure the periter!" Han Zheng barked, swinging his door open the mont the trucks ground to a halt.
Xiao Li, his stamina partially recovered, leaped from the running board, his power instantly coating his arms in a dense layer of protective gray minerals as he kicked open the steel gates.
Alongside him, Ah Hua and Lieutenant Chen swept the concrete courtyard, ensuring every dark corner of the old ranger station was completely clear of threats.
"Clear!" Lieutenant Chen shouted back, his hands glowing with a faint, fading embers of thermal energy.
For the next twenty minutes, the oldiers functioned like a perfectly oiled machine, helping the weak, trembling villagers unload their heavy boxes, fuel canisters, and food crates into the secure concrete rooms of the outpost.
As the final supplies were placed inside the main hall, Han Zheng walked into the center of the room. Reaching down to his utility belt, he detached a sleek, heavy-duty tallic cylinder—a specialized, military-grade reverse-osmosis water purifier capable of filtering out biological pathogens and basic chemical mutations. He placed it firmly on the wooden table.
"This runs on a standard solar cell," Han Zheng said flatly, his deep voice echoing in the quiet concrete room. "It will keep your drinking supply clean for the next six months. Use it wisely."
Guo Jiong stared at the high-grade piece of survival technology, his eyes welling with raw, unadulterated emotion. In this dark, unforgiving new world where human life was treated as completely expendable, this elite squad had not only spared them, but had actively given them the literal tools to rebuild a civilization.
The rugged hunter stepped forward, his fra trembling slightly as he bowed his head deeply to Han Zheng and Lin Qing. "I don’t care what your mission is, or where the road takes you," Guo Jiong said, his voice thick with absolute sincerity. "You saved my people. You saved my daughter. My na is Guo Jiong, and from this day forward, my life belongs to your unit. If you ever pass through here again, or if the world ever nds... I swear on my soul I will repay this debt."
Han Zheng’s face remained a disciplined, unreadable mask. He simply nodded once, a brief, respectful acknowledgnt of the hunter’s warrior code. Beside him, Lin Qing kept her dark eyes locked on the periter window, her posture straight as she let out a tiny, indifferent hum. They didn’t make grand promises; they simply accepted the weight of his words with the quiet gravity of true survivors.
Near the edge of the courtyard, away from the adults, a quiet interaction was taking place.
Gu An stood near the rear bumper of the station wagon, her hands tucked nervously into her pockets. She looked across at Guo Jiong’s small daughter, who was staring down at her own tiny hands, a faint, erratic ripple of unford supernatural energy occasionally pulsing through her fingers.
Stepping forward shyly, Gu An cleared her throat, her young voice soft but clear. "Um... when the energy feels like it’s burning your chest, don’t try to push it out all at once," she whispered, offering a small, reassuring nod. "You have to pull it down into your stomach first. Hold your breath for three seconds, let it settle against your ribs, and then let it slide down to your feet. It stops the shaking."
The little girl looked up, her wide, fearful eyes blinking as she listened to her advice. She slowly pulled her breath in, following his instructions, and the violent, static twitching in her fingers instantly smoothed out into a calm, steady rhythm. A small, tentative smile ford on her face. Gu An’s cheeks flushed slightly with a youthful, shy pride, and she quickly gave her a small wave before scrambling back toward the safety of the transport truck.
"Mount up! We’re burning daylight!" Lieutenant Chen’s voice echoed across the courtyard.
Han Zheng and Lin Qing turned seamlessly, walking away from the forestry bunker without a single backward glance. They climbed into the SUV, the heavy doors slamming shut with a resounding, definitive ’thud’.
The heavy diesel engines roared back to life. As the convoy slowly backed out of the steel gates and turned back toward the southern highway, Guo Jiong and the villagers stood firmly on the concrete steps of their new sanctuary, watching the disappearing cloud of exhaust dust with silent, reverent hope.
Inside the moving cabin, the air was calm. Han Zheng gripped the steering wheel, his dark eyes shifting slightly toward the passenger seat where Lin Qing was checking the bolt assembly of her rifle.
The village was behind them, the seeds were secured, and the open, dangerous road to the southern sanctuary lay straight ahead.
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