Inside the administrative building, the heavy scent of cold concrete and old paper hung thick in the air. The Vanguard unit lay scattered across the wide main hallway on thin, green sleeping mats.
Their deep snoring echoed off the high ceilings, a collective testant to their absolute, crushing physical exhaustion. Dark, prominent circles hung heavily beneath the eyes of every single soldier—seasoned, hardened n who had pushed their physical bodies to the absolute biological limit over the last forty-eight hours to anchor the safety of the convoy against the horrors of the road.
Now, as the dim dawn broke, the fruits of that exhausting labor manifested in a quiet, undisturbed sanctuary. The soldiers slept like the dead, their weapons tucked securely against their chests, capitalizing on every precious second of safety.
Inside the small, partitioned office that had been chosen for the family, the air remained crisp and thin. Lin Qing opened her eyes precisely at dawn.
She lay perfectly still for a mont, her mind tracking the hairline cracks in the concrete ceiling above. True to her silent, profound resolution from the day before, the invisible, icy wall she had ticulously kept between herself and this world felt a fraction lighter. She was no longer just a detached spectator watching fictional characters interact within the safe boundaries of a book; she was a living, breathing participant in a very real, incredibly dangerous reality. These people were real, their pain was real, and she was firmly woven into their survival.
Turning her head with, she checked the improvised bedding laid out on the floor beside her. The three children were tucked securely against the sturdy back wall, safely positioned in a protective pocket between her own sleeping mat and Han Zheng’s large, parallel fra.
Su Xiao was peacefully asleep now, her small, pale face finally relaxed after a turbulent night. Deep in the dead of night, when the rest of the building had fallen into silence, the little girl had suddenly started whimpering.
She had been trapped in the throes of a nightmare about the suffocating white mist and the traumatic, bloody loss of her mother. She had awoken in the darkness, crying silently, her tiny fra shaking violently as she desperately clutched the canvas straps of her pink cartoon backpack as if it were her last remaining anchor to a world that had completely abandoned her.
Han Ye, possessing the sharp, hyper-vigilant mind of a hardened adult regressor, had snapped awake the exact instant her breathing faltered. His initial reaction had been one of cold, calculating pragmatism. He had looked at the weeping girl in the dim, shadowed light of the room, his dark eyes narrowing with intense focus.
"If she loses control, screams, and wakes up everyone," Han Ye had reasoned silently to himself, "they will spend their ti comforting her instead of sleeping. The soldiers sleeping in the hallway have dark circles deep enough to cave in their faces; they are the front-line shield, and they cannot afford to lose a single minute of rest because a traumatized child cannot hold her tears."
Acting purely out of a desire to enforce silence and protect everyone’s physical efficiency, Han Ye had reached out his small hand through the darkness and tightly gripped Su Xiao’s sleeve.
But because his current body was still that of an innocent child, the small, firm contact had accidentally provided the exact grounding, physical touch a terrified child desperately needed. To ensure she stayed quiet and didn’t trigger any alarms, he had leaned in closer, his voice dropping into a strict, low, and commanding whisper that carried an eerie weight: "Breathe. You’re safe here. Be quiet."
Gu An had stirred shortly after. Shifting beneath her heavy layers, she had instinctively pulled Su Xiao into her own wool blanket, sharing her natural warmth. Grounded by the iron, unyielding grip of Han Ye and completely wrapped in Gu An’s quiet, comforting embrace, Su Xiao’s erratic hyperventilation had slowly begun to decelerate. The terror had receded from her eyes, and she had eventually drifted back into a deep, genuinely peaceful slumber.
Lin Qing had quietly watched that entire midnight display through the faint sliver of light illuminating her sleeping mat. She hadn’t intervened, choosing instead to analyze the fascinating dynamic.
She had realized then that despite Han Ye’s eerie, pragmatic maturity and Su Xiao’s future status as an absolute powerhouse, right now, in the dark, cold belly of a broken world, they were still just traumatized children keeping each other alive through raw instinct. It had only reinforced her internal desire to protect this fragile sanctuary they were building on the road.
Now, at the break of dawn, Commander Han Zheng was already fully awake and functional. He sat silently on the edge of a low wooden bench near the office door, checking the internal chanisms and the slide action of his heavy sidearm with practiced precision.
He caught Lin Qing’s gaze across the dim room and offered a brief, quiet nod of agreent. There was no need for empty words between them. It was ti to wake the children, pack the heavy gear, and prepare for the long, hazard-filled drive toward the dangerous regional bridges that lay ahead.
Lin Qing slid out from beneath her thick blankets, her boots making no sound on the dusty, weathered floorboards. She walked over to the cluster of sleeping figures, kneeling down smoothly as she prepared to gently rouse them from their deep slumber. "Han Ye, Gu An," she spoke, her voice low but clear. "Wake up. We’re rolling out soon."
But before her fingertips could even make physical contact with the wool of Gu An’s blanket, the fragile, hard-won peace of the winter morning was violently shattered.
In the communal kitchen hallway located just outside the cracked, unhinged office door, one of the soldiers was performing a routine transfer of their tal supply kits.
His numb fingers, stiffened by the ambient cold temperatures, slipped against the cold, greasy tal of his gear. A heavy tin cooking bowl slipped from his grasp and crashed violently onto the bare concrete floorboards.
CLANG!
The sharp, high-pitched tallic resonance exploded through the enclosed concrete building like a sudden, unexpected gunshot inside a vault. It echoed off the walls, sharp and piercing.
The reaction inside the family room was instantaneous and violent. Han Ye snapped awake in a fraction of a second, his body flinching hard as his deeply ingrained survival instincts imdiately prepared to call upon the lethal shadows swirling beneath the floorboards. Beside him, Gu An gasped loudly, her eyes flying open in sudden, disoriented panic, her breath catching in her throat as she looked around for a threat.
But it was Su Xiao who broke completely.
The sudden, violent auditory spike tore straight through her fragile, heavily traumatized psyche. In her mind, the sharp tallic crash didn’t sound like a dropped bowl; it perfectly mimicked the horrific, deafening sounds of collapsing concrete structures, tearing tal, and the horrific, wet sounds of the mutating mist where she had watched her mother perish. The peace she had fought so hard to find during the deep night vanished in an instant, replaced by an overwhelming terror.
She didn’t just wake up; she panicked with every fiber of her being while her conscious mind was still trapped in a nightmare. A high-pitched, absolutely terrified scream tore from her throat, raw, piercing, and utterly agonizing.
"No!"
Before Lin Qing could react or reach out her arms to physically anchor the thrashing child, the very air inside the small office warped and distorted violently. A sudden, visible shimr of heat and atmospheric pressure localized entirely around Su Xiao’s small, trembling fra. All at once, a massive, invisible concussive force exploded outward from the center of the child like a shockwave.
The sheer, raw pressure of the invisible anomaly slamd heavily into Lin Qing’s chest. The force was imnse, lifting her entire adult fra off her feet and throwing her backward through the air like a ragdoll.
Beside her, Han Ye and Gu An were violently swept off their sleeping mats, their small bodies tumbling rapidly across the hard concrete floor as the invisible blast rippled through the confines of the small room.
The energy wave slamd into the walls, shattering the remaining cracked glass panes in the office windows into a massive, glittering shower of crystalline dust that rained down onto the courtyard outside.
The eruption lasted less than three seconds. The invisible atmospheric pressure snapped back into absolute nothingness, leaving a heavy, suffocating silence in its wake, save for the sound of shifting dust, settling debris, and the distant, alard shouts of the soldiers rushing down the hallway with their rifles raised and ready to kill.
Han Zheng was on his feet in a microsecond, his force manipulation power flaring instinctively into visible, humming ripples of energy around his large hands. He instantly blocked the main doorway with his massive fra, his sharp, dark eyes scanning the interior and exterior for an enemy ambush. "Lin Qing! What happened? What hit us?!"
"No external threat," Lin Qing called out, her voice laced with a rare, incredibly sharp urgency. She had landed hard against the edge of the heavy wooden desk, the impact bruising her side, but she was already up and moving before the dust could even settle on the floorboards.
Neither she nor the two children were seriously injured—the invisible force had been a blunt, primal, defensive push born of pure panic rather than a focused, lethal attack ant to slice through flesh.
Ignoring the dull ache radiating through her shoulder, Lin Qing hurried directly across the ruined floorboards, stepping over the glittering shards of shattered glass to reach the center of the room where Su Xiao lay.
The little girl was lying curled on her side, trembling so violently from head to toe that her teeth were audibly chattering.
The pink canvas backpack had dropped from her paralyzed fingers, rolling idly away into the dusty corner of the room. Her eyes were rolled back slightly, showing the whites, her small chest heaving in rapid, shallow, terrifying gasps as if she were actively suffocating on the very oxygen around her.
Lin Qing knelt down smoothly, extending her bare hand to touch the child’s pale forehead. The very millisecond her skin made physical contact with the girl, Lin Qing flinched slightly, her eyes widening in surprise.
Su Xiao’s skin was radiating a terrifying, completely unnatural heat—a scorching, dry temperature so intense that it felt like touching a boiling radiator or an engine block under high load. Beads of thick sweat were breaking out rapidly across her hairline, her small face turning a deep, dangerous crimson as her internal temperature skyrocketed past safe biological limits.
Han Ye scrambled back to his feet, ignoring the dust on his clothes. His dark eyes locked onto the trembling, feverish girl with a cold and heavy realization. He knew imdiately that this wasn’t a standard childhood illness, and it wasn’t a simple reaction to cold weather. This was the cellular crisis of a human body undergoing a rapid, violent genetic mutation.
Lin Qing looked up from the floor, her expression entirely serious, her cold deanor completely locked in as the rest of the soilders crowded around the doorway with tense expressions.
"She has a dangerously high fever," Lin Qing reported to Han Zheng, her fingers steadily monitoring the child’s erratic, thumping pulse. "And she didn’t just panic. She just awakened her powers."
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