I Built a Safe Zone in the Dead World

Chapter 158: Wood and Wire

I Built a Safe Zone in the Dead World

Chapter 158: Wood and Wire

Translate to
Chapter 158: Wood and Wire

The return of the Obsidian to the lagoon was a far quieter affair than its departure. There were no flashing cloaking fields, no dramatic walls of spray, and no territorial posturing at the edge of the pier. The vessel glided across the glassy, sunlit water of the late morning, its sleek carbon-fiber hull bearing the fine, salty crust of an ocean that had finally run out of tantrums.

When the mechanical hatch slid open, the island air that rushed into the cockpit felt remarkably ordinary. It smelled of wild sage, wet limestone, and the faintly sweet rot of the mangrove flats.

Arata stepped onto the beach first. His body felt heavy, his muscles aching with the deep, physical fatigue that only comes when the artificial adrenaline of a neural link completely evaporates. The amber glow beneath his silver crescent scar had faded, leaving his palm cold, pale, and thoroughly biological.

Airi walked a half-step behind him, her ironwood harpoon resting across her shoulder. Her expression was neutral, but it was the relaxed neutrality of a soldier who had cleared the valley, not the defensive stiffness she had worn for weeks.

Vesper remained on the hull of her ship for a long moment, looking up at the green mountain ridge. She had changed into a clean, utilitarian gray tunic that lacked the sharp, corporate edges of her previous attire, her platinum hair tied back in a simple, uncharacteristic knot. She looked less like a phantom from a forgotten server and more like a traveler who had simply come a very long way.

"You’re not coming up to the square?" Arata asked, turning back to face her from the sand.

Vesper let out a short, quiet breath that was almost a laugh. She hopped down from the hull, her boots sinking an inch into the wet beach. "The Remnant Fleet is currently rewriting three centuries of naval protocol because a fisherman broke their magic crystal, Arata. If I stay away from the flagship’s comms array for more than six hours, my first officer will probably declare martial law and appoint a committee to study the ocean floor."

She walked up to them, stopping just outside the boundary of Arata’s personal space. Her violet eyes shifted from Arata to Airi. The sharp, provocative friction that had defined every interaction between the two women since the Obsidian first breached the lagoon was gone, replaced by a strange, quiet vacancy— the lingering aftereffect of having their minds stitched together in the white room of the core.

"The database in Gideon’s head is stable," Vesper said, her voice dropping into that smoky, low register, though it lacked its theatrical purr. "The Fleet’s engineers are setting up a passive listening post at the edge of the Dead Reef. We’re not hunting the nodes anymore, Architect. We’re just... watching the weather."

"That’s a start," Arata said.

Vesper looked at him for a beat longer, her gaze tracking the line of his jaw before she extended her hand toward Airi. It wasn’t a formal gesture; it was the quick, blunt offer of one combatant to another. "Keep the dampeners tuned, sister. If the Scrappers try a secondary logic harvest, they won’t use the mangroves. They’ll come through the eastern rifts."

Airi looked at Vesper’s hand, then gripped it— briefly, firmly, and without a trace of the territorial heat that had dominated the week. "The rifts are already staked," Airi said. "They won’t get past the shelf."

Vesper nodded once, turned on her heel, and pulled herself back onto the Obsidian. The hatch hissed shut with a solid, pressurized seal, and within moments, the black wedge of the boat was backing out into the deep channel, its wake leaving a long, dissolving arrow of white foam that pointed toward the open sea.

Arata watched it go until the glare of the noon sun turned the hull into a tiny, dancing speck on the horizon.

"She’s lonely," Airi said softly from his side.

Arata looked down at her, surprised by the lack of edge in her voice. "What?"

"In the core," Airi said, her fingers tightening around the shaft of her harpoon as she looked out at the empty water. "When everything fell apart. I felt it. She’s been the only person on that flagship who remembers what the sky used to look like. The rest of them just see the iron."

She turned away from the sea, her eyes meeting Arata’s with a steady, uncompromising clarity. "But she’s also a terrible houseguest. Let’s go find Yuna."

The village square was remarkably loud.

Gideon was sitting on the edge of the well, his yellowed technician’s uniform replaced by a loose, oversized linen shirt Akari had clearly stolen from one of the larger forge workers. He was currently holding a long piece of charcoal, drawing a massively complex schematic of an old-world ventilation system directly onto the side of a wooden water trough while Yuna watched him, her brow furrowed in deep, studious concentration.

"The air must cycle!" Gideon was insisting, his voice a high, energetic rattle as he scratched a series of arrows into the pine. "If the pressure drops in the lower tiers, the code-density thickens! You get pooling! You get logic puddles in the corners!"

"We don’t have tiers, Gideon," Yuna explained patiently, not looking up from her notebook. "We have three huts and a goat pen. The air moves because the wind blows from the south."

"Highly inefficient," Gideon muttered, though he didn’t stop drawing.

Akari emerged from the healing hut with a basket of dried roots, stopping when she saw Arata and Airi enter the clearing. She didn’t ask about the flagship, the core, or the global defense grid. She simply walked over, grabbed Arata’s right hand, and peeled back the remaining shreds of his burnt bandage to look at the silver crescent scar.

"It’s stopped leaking electricity," she pronounced, her tone dry and professional as she rubbed a thick, pungent green ointment into the pink skin. "Which means you can go back to helping the woodcutters tomorrow. We’re three cords short for the winter stores because everyone spent the week running around with weapons."

"I’ll start on the south ridge after lunch," Arata smiled, the mundane weight of the requirement feeling like a massive, beautiful gift.

"Good," Akari said, patting his arm before moving toward the well to yell at Gideon for ruining the water trough.

The afternoon settled over the island with the slow, heavy heat of late autumn. Arata didn’t go back to his terminal. He didn’t check the passive frequencies Vesper had left encoded in his spare interface. Instead, he spent three hours with an old iron adze, clearing the rough knots from a long beam of white pine that would eventually become the main support for the village’s new grain storage.

It was hard, repetitive, and entirely manual labor. His shoulder ached, his palms grew sticky with pine resin, and the wood shavings caught in his hair. Every hour or so, the silver scar on his palm would twinge— not with code, but with the simple, biological strain of a muscle that was learning how to be old.

As the sun began to dip behind the western ridge, casting long, purple shadows across the packed earth of the commons, Airi sat on the porch of their hut. She was using a small oil-stone to sharpen the edge of her hunting knife, the steady, rhythmic *shrrk-shrrk* of the metal against the rock filling the quiet space between them.

Arata set the adze down, wiping his brow with the back of his forearm. He walked over to the porch, sitting on the rough-hewn step by her boots.

"The hum in the well is gone," he said, looking out toward the center of the square where Yuna was currently trying to explain the concept of a vegetable garden to a highly skeptical Gideon. "The island digested the discharge. It’s just dirt again." 𝓯𝙧𝓮𝓮𝒘𝓮𝙗𝙣𝒐𝒗𝒆𝓵.𝓬𝓸𝒎

Airi stopped the stone. She didn’t look up immediately, her fingers tracing the flat of the blade she had carried since she was fifteen years old. "It’s never going to be just dirt, Arata. We know what’s under it now. We know what’s across the water."

"Does that change things?"

She set the knife down on the timber beside her, leaning back against the structural post of the door. The sunset caught the silver streaks in her dark hair, turning them into lines of cold, clean light.

"No," she said, her voice low and steady. "It just means the fence needs to be stronger."

She reached out, her hand finding his sticky, pine-scented palm. Her fingers locked into his, her grip solid, real, and completely unoptimized.

The anomalies were still out there, pulsing in the dark trenches of the Atlantic and the northern rifts, waiting for the system to cycle. The Remnant Fleet was floating on a graveyard of iron, trying to learn how to speak to its own ghosts. But on this specific patch of mud, the sun was going down, the wood was cut, and the roof didn’t leak.

"Come inside," Airi said, her voice softening as she pulled him up from the step. "The soup is cold."

How did this chapter make you feel?

One tap helps us surface trending chapters and recommend titles you'll actually enjoy — your vote shapes You may also like.