The silhouette did not move. It stood like a solitary, jagged spire breaking through the heavy, rolling gray morning mist that hovered over the frosted drainage ditch. Because the lead military transport truck was positioned directly ahead of them, blocking their central field of vision, Lin Qing’s sharp instincts had caught the anomaly purely from the side periphery, slicing through the gray fog.
Her posture snapped instantly from relaxed fatigue into a rigid stance. Her fingers tightened like iron bands around the cold steel fra of her rifle, her thumb naturally resting on the safety switch. "Stop the car. Left flank, thirty ters out."
Han Zheng’s reaction was instantaneous. He did not slam on the brakes to avoid alerting the convoy’s rear, but his foot smoothly lifted off the accelerator, bringing the armored SUV to a silent, sudden halt on the frozen gravel. Behind them, the trailing transport truck imdiately mimicked the movent, its heavy air brakes hissing quietly into the dawn.
"Lieutenant Chen, hold status," Han Zheng communicated through his radio, his deep voice dropping into a low, vibrationless frequency. "We have an unidentified visual on the left shoulder."
Lin Qing leaned forward, her eyes narrowing as she tapped the secondary dashboard monitor, bringing up the live feed from the SUV’s advanced thermal and optical sensors. The digital interface blinked twice, processing the data. When the crosshairs locked onto the distant silhouette, the screen did not light up with the vibrant, bright orange of a living human’s core body temperature. It remained a dull, icy blue.
It was a corpse. A zombie.
Yet, as the morning mist slowly swirled and parted under the weak, rising sun, the image that materialized on the optical lens completely defied the typical, grotesque morphology of the infected. This was a woman. She did not possess the missing flesh, the bloated, rotting skin, or the fractured limbs of a common stray.
Her clothes were relatively clean, and her fra was entirely intact. She looked almost entirely like a normal human being, save for two terrifying anomalies: her skin was a dull, unnatural, tallic gray, and thick, branching black veins pulsed visibly beneath the surface of her neck and jawline, tracing a map of viral corruption up toward her temples.
"Alert all units. Standby for engagent," Lin Qing said into her line, her tone clinical and rapid. "Mutation profile is atypical. High tissue preservation. Possible high-tier variant."
But the shootout they anticipated did not happen.
The zombie woman made no aggressive movent toward the idling convoy. She did not open her jaw to emit the standard, blood-curdling screech that usually triggered a horde, nor did she sprint toward the vehicles with hunger-driven speed. Instead, she stood perfectly straight in the freezing dirt, her milky, dead eyes staring blankly across the road, tracking nothing.
It was then that Lin Qing noticed her hands. The creature’s gray, stiff fingers were wrapped around sothing clutched tightly against her stomach.
Moving with a jarring, chanical precision—like a poorly programd marionette being jerked by invisible strings—the zombie woman slowly bent her knees. The movent was entirely unnatural, accompanied by the faint, wet sound of stiffened muscles forcing themselves to flex against rigor mortis. She leaned down, carefully placing the object she was holding onto the frosted patch of weeds at the very edge of the dirt road.
Once the object was grounded, she straightened her back with the sa rigid, chanical stiffness. Without a single glance at the armored SUV, without a single display of hostility, she turned her body around and walked away. Her gait was heavy, her legs moving like solid columns of ice, her figure gradually dissolving back into the thick, gray morning mist of the deep cornfields until she was completely swallowed by the dawn.
The entire sequence was profoundly strange, illogical, and entirely counterproductive to the predatory nature of the virus.
"Stay inside," Han Zheng commanded quietly.
He unlatched his harness, his large fra projecting an aura of absolute caution as he pushed his door open and stepped out into the freezing morning air. Lin Qing moved simultaneously, opening her passenger door just enough to rest her rifle over the reinforced fra, her scope tracking the exact path the gray woman had taken into the fields.
Han Zheng stood by the side of the SUV, his eyes closed for a fraction of a second as he activated his advanced senses. He expanded his awareness, filtering out the low hum of the vehicle engines to listen to the vibrations of the frozen plains. He searched for the heavy, chaotic breathing of a hidden ambush, the shifting of hundreds of feet in the dirt, or the localized electromagnetic pressure of a Ruler-type.
Nothing. The wind was empty. The fields were dead. There was no other zombie within their imdiate tracking radius.
"The periter is clear," Han Zheng said, his voice cutting through the crisp air.
He walked forward slowly, his hand resting on the grip of his sidearm, his eyes scanning the frosted grass until he reached the exact spot where the creature had stood. Resting in the dirt was a small, bright pink backpack decorated with faded cartoon characters—a stark, colorful contrast against the bleak, dead landscape of the apocalypse.
Han Zheng knelt down, his thick, tactical gloves handling the small bag with cautious precision. He checked the straps for any hidden wires or anomalies before unzipping the main compartnt. He didn’t find explosives or biochemical traps. Instead, his hand pulled out a dirty, well-loved stuffed rabbit with a missing button eye, followed by a small, cute notebook with a glittering cover.
As he pulled the notebook free from the canvas lining, a loose piece of glossed paper slipped out from between the pages, fluttering down into the frost.
Han Zheng caught it before the moisture could ruin the surface. He flipped it over.
Lin Qing stepped down from the passenger side, her rifle still held at a low ready as she walked over to join him, her combat boots crunching on the frozen weeds. She looked down over his shoulder at the object in his hand.
It was a photograph.
The image was vibrant, captured under the bright, warm sunshine of a world that no longer existed. In the center of the fra stood a younger, clean-faced Su Xiao, laughing brightly as she held up a lting ice cream cone. Standing directly beside her, with her arm wrapped protectively around the little girl’s shoulders, was the exact sa woman they had just saw but as a human. In the photo, her skin was warm, her eyes were bright and full of life, and her smile was radiating an absolute, fierce maternal devotion.
Inside the SUV, the three children remained fast asleep, completely oblivious to the silent revelation occurring just yards away from their tires.
Outside in the biting cold, Han Zheng and Lin Qing stood entirely paralyzed, staring at the glossy paper in shock. The pieces of the bizarre puzzle finally snapped together with devastating clarity.
It hadn’t been a trap, a calculation, or a psychological ga deployed by a Ruler-type monster to throw them off balance.
It was a mother. A mother who had been turned into a monster, but whose lingering, fractured human clarity had sohow fought through the corruption of the virus just long enough to deliver her daughter’s remaining belongings to the people who had taken her in.
Han Zheng stared at the image, his thumb brushing the corner of the glossed paper. The wind picked up, rustling the dry stalks of corn in the adjacent field, but neither of them moved. The silence between them grew heavy, weighted by the sheer implication of what they had just witnessed. In a world where the infected were thought to be completely erased of their humanity, this woman had sohow held onto a shred of herself.
"She kept it," Lin Qing murmured, her voice lower than usual, stripped of its usual distance. Her eyes remained fixed on the photograph, tracing the lines of the mother’s face. "The viral load in a variant of that tier usually overrides the frontal lobe within minutes. It shouldn’t be possible to retain any mories, let alone an emotional drive."
"It doesn’t change our plan," Han Zheng said, though his voice lacked its usual edge. He stood up slowly, carefully slipping the photograph back between the pages of the glittering notebook before sliding it back into the pink backpack. He zipped it shut with a deliberate click. "But it changes what we know. If she had enough clarity to follow us, other high-tier variants might track our movents with purpose, not just instinct."
Lin Qing nodded, her gaze shifting back to the misty fields where the woman had disappeared. The gray fog was thickening again, swallowing the horizon in a featureless blanket. "We need to move before the temperature drops any further. The trucks are idling hot; they’ll attract attention if we stay still on the shoulder."
"Agreed." Han Zheng gripped the handles of the backpack, turning back toward the vehicle.
They walked back in lockstep, their movents synchronized. When Han Zheng pulled open the driver’s door, the warm air from the SUV’s cabin hit them, carrying the faint scent of old upholstery and the lingering sweetness of the strawberry candy Gu An had given the girl.
In the back seat, Su Xiao shifted slightly, her small fingers tightening around the chemical hand warr that had now gone completely cold. She let out a tiny, soft sigh in her sleep, completely unaware that her past had just walked out of the mist to leave her a final farewell.
Han Zheng placed the pink backpack carefully on the floorboard beneath the front console, out of imdiate sight of the children, before sliding back into his harness. He engaged the transmission, the engine grumbling as the vehicle rolled forward once more, its tires gripping the frozen gravel of the high drainage ridge.
Lin Qing adjusted her scope, her eyes returning to the dashboard monitor. The first true light of dawn was finally breaking, casting long, pale shadows across the empty plains, but the cold weight of what they had found remained locked inside the car, riding silently between them as the convoy moved deeper into the unknown.
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