Zombie Domination-Chapter 330- Data
Dr. Aris Thorne moved with sharp, economical steps, cutting Seth off from his retreating group near the skeletal remains of an old vendor stall. Her Tech-Savants hovered a respectful, uncomfortable distance away.
"Seth. A moment," she said, her voice low, stripped of its usual academic pretense. "You see the arithmetic as clearly as I do. Individually, we are eliminated in the first phase. Magnus consolidates power. The Arbiters get their simple, controllable outcome. Our factions are erased."
Seth didn't turn fully, keeping one eye on his Free Folk. Maya was checking her blades, her movements tense but precise. Old Man Harris was muttering over a small pouch of metallic shrapnel, his hands steady. The twins, Eli and Rena, were already scouting the perimeter of the plaza, looking for any scrap of cover or uneven ground.
"I see it," Seth replied, his voice flat.
"Then you must also see the logical solution. A temporary alliance. My tech can augment your people's… improvisational skills. We coordinate, eliminate the Ironblood threat first, then settle our dispute. It is the only path with a probability of success above zero."
Seth finally looked at her. Her eyes were like polished lenses, calculating his value as a variable. He saw no trust there, only a cold assessment of utility. She saw his people as tools, just more organic than the ones she built.
"An alliance needs trust, Doc," Seth said, shaking his head. "You trust your scanners and your probability matrices. I trust them." He jerked his chin toward his team. "Maya can hear a power cell hum from fifty yards. Harris can turn garbage into a perimeter explosive. The twins know every crack in this city's bones. You'd try to fit us into your schematic, and we'd break it. We'd be waiting for your 'support' that gets calculated away as an acceptable loss. No deal. We survive our way."
Thorne's jaw tightened. "Sentimentality is a cognitive error that leads to extinction."
"Call it what you want. We're not your spare parts." He turned to walk away. "Good luck with your math."
Before Thorne could issue a scathing retort, a sudden shift in the plaza's atmosphere silenced all murmured strategizing. One of the silver-masked Enforcers, who had stood as still as statues, broke formation and strode quickly toward the central Arbiter. Its movements lacked their usual fluid grace, there was a haste to them that was profoundly unnerving.
"Arbiter," the Enforcer's voice, usually a toneless drone, carried a discernible strain. It was barely above a whisper, but the acoustic design of the plaza carried it to the leaders. "The monitoring feed from the Aethel Core site. There is a… catastrophic anomaly. The containment protocols have been breached without external trigger."
All eyes snapped to the messenger. Confusion, then suspicion, rippled through the assembled factions.
"What nonsense is this?" Magnus boomed, his triumphant mood souring. "A distraction? One of their tricks?" He glared accusingly at Thorne, then Seth.
"Explain. Clearly," the central Arbiter commanded, its head tilting toward its subordinate.
Before the Enforcer could elaborate, Magnus's face darkened with sudden, violent conviction. He pointed a massive finger toward the ruined buildings surrounding the plaza. "Him! It's that damned ghost, Julian! This is his work! He slipped past your watch, didn't he? He's at the Core right now, stealing it out from under us!" His rage was immediate and total, a convenient focus for all the chaotic tension. His mercenaries gripped their weapons, snarling, ready to hunt.
"SILENCE."
The Arbiter's voice didn't rise in volume, but it punched through the noise, carrying a frequency that vibrated in the teeth and momentarily stilled all thought. The silver mask turned to Magnus. "Your accusation is a hypothesis without data. You will listen. Now."
The commanding authority was absolute. Magnus seethed but shut his mouth, his chest heaving.
The flustered Enforcer continued. "The Aethel Core's energy signature has increased by 500%. It is no longer passively emitting. It is… absorbing. All nearby technology. The monitoring drones, the sensor pylons we placed, even the inactive remnants of Old World machinery in the vicinity. They are being dismantled at a molecular level and drawn into the central mass. The blue liquid core is solidifying, forming… structures. Preliminary scans suggest a rudimentary, defensive morphology. It is acting as a single entity. A self-preservation protocol we did not anticipate."
A stunned silence fell, deeper than before. This wasn't a tactic. This wasn't sabotage. This was the prize itself turning monstrous.
"Impossible," Dr. Thorne breathed, but her data-slate was already confirming it, streams of corrupted data and violent energy spikes flashing across its screen. Her scientific certainty was cracking. "The core was inert! Its properties were stable! This violates every—"
"It violates our understanding," the Arbiter interrupted, its tone for the first time betraying something beneath the absolute calm: a sliver of recalculation. "The scenario is outside all projected parameters. The 'winner takes all' decree is temporarily suspended."
It turned its mask to encompass all three faction leaders, the red lenses glowing with renewed intensity.
"A new, primary threat has been identified at the Core site. Its nature is unknown, its capabilities are escalating. It has already neutralized our surveillance. If it continues to absorb matter and energy unchecked, it will become an existential problem for all factions, and for the stability of this entire sector."
The Arbiter paused, letting the gravity sink in. 𝚏𝐫𝚎𝗲𝕨𝐞𝐛𝕟𝚘𝐯𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝗺
"Therefore, a new metric for the right to the Core is instituted: The capability to neutralize this anomaly. The faction that contributes most decisively to its containment or destruction will earn the primary claim. Should you fail to act, or if the anomaly breaches a critical threshold, we will be forced to enact a sector-wide sterilization protocol. You have forty-five minutes to prepare. Assemble your combat teams. We move on the Core site together."
"Neutralize the anomaly?" Magnus's voice was a low, dangerous rumble, directed at the retreating backs of the Arbiters. "We are not your cleanup crew, you chrome-faced bureaucrats! You said fight each other for the Core. Now the Core itself is the enemy? This reeks of a scheme!"
Ken, ever the calm counterpoint, leaned in. "Sir, the energy readings the Enforcer described… They don't match anything in all the archives.
This is not a trick. It is a genuine crisis. The Arbiter did not command; it informed. And it offered a new condition for the claim."
Magnus scowled, but he listened. Ken's perception was rarely wrong. "So we fight this… thing. And if we beat it, the Core is ours, but it's now a monster? What use is a monster?"
"Perhaps it can be subdued. Contained," Ken suggested, though he sounded uncertain. "Or perhaps destroying its defensive form will return it to a stable state. The point is, the other factions are now forced to confront the same problem. Our strength is still our greatest asset here."
Across the plaza, Seth was arriving at a colder, more pragmatic conclusion. He gathered his Free Folk close. "You heard it. The Core is eating tech, building itself a body. That's not a source anymore; that's a predator in its den. There's no 'claiming' that. There's only surviving it or putting it down."
"But the Arbiter said the one who deals with it gets the claim," Maya whispered, confused.
Seth shook his head, his scavenger's eyes hard. "Think. If you 'claim' a rabid wolf after shooting it, what do you have? A dead wolf. Maybe some teeth. The real prize—the safe, powerful energy source—is gone. It's turned into a problem. Fighting it isn't for profit anymore; it's because if we don't, it might come out hunting us, or the Arbiters will 'sterilize' the whole sector with us in it. We're not fighting for a treasure. We're fighting for our lives, and the Arbiter is just slapping a reward sticker on a coffin."
His words landed heavily on his group. The fight had shifted from a dangerous opportunity to a necessary, and likely thankless, defense.
Dr. Aris Thorne, however, was vibrating with a different energy entirely. Fear was present, yes, a sharp, clinical fear of the unknown variables. But it was overwhelmingly drowned out by a blazing, insatiable curiosity. Her fingers trembled slightly, not from terror, but from frantic excitement as she reviewed the corrupted data.
"A self-organizing defense protocol… metamorphosis triggered by absorption… a non-biological entity exhibiting pseudo-instinctual preservation behavior…" she muttered to herself, her eyes wide behind her spectacles. To her, the Core hadn't become a monster, it had become the most fascinating specimen in existence. The idea of destroying it was anathema. It needed to be studied, subdued, analyzed. The Arbiter's new decree was a chance to get close, to gather data, to understand.
The risks were incalculable, but the potential knowledge… was infinite.
The Arbiters, observing the three leaders from their transport, processed their hesitation, their anger, and their dawning dread. The central Arbiter's synthesized voice echoed out once more, cutting through the individual ruminations.
"We perceive your recalcitrance. The threat is unorthodox and the benefits are now uncertain. Therefore, to incentivize cooperative action against this sector-wide anomaly, we offer this: within our vaults, we possess a limited reserve of stabilized Aethel energy, harvested before this instability manifested. It is inert. Safe. A guaranteed resource."
The Arbiter let the offer hang, a masterful play. It wasn't commanding obedience, it was purchasing it.
"The faction that contributes most decisively to the neutralization of the anomalous Core will be granted this reserve. A tangible, secure reward. The anomalous Core itself, once neutralized, will be sequestered by us for study. You fight not for the rogue prize, but for a sure one. The alternative is sector sterilization. The choice remains, but the terms are now clear. Prepare. We depart in forty minutes."
The Arbiter's new offer landed, recalibrating the desperate calculus in each leader's mind.
Magnus was the first to break the tense silence, a grim, toothy smile spreading across his face. "A sure prize for the strong. That's a language I understand. Fine. We'll break this thing, and take our payment." He turned to Kael, cracking his knuckles. "Forget finesse. Prepare the heavy munitions and shredders. We'll turn its 'defensive morphology' to scrap."
Near the rusted vendor stall, Seth let out a short, humorless laugh, catching Magnus's declaration. He looked at his wary Free Folk. "A stocked freezer instead of a live wire," he muttered to Maya and Old Man Harris. "Still a trap, but at least the bait's edible. We fight smart, hit from the shadows, let the big man take the main blow. We just need to make sure our contribution is… noticeable enough when the dust settles."
Dr. Aris Thorne adjusted her spectacles, her gaze fixed on the data-slate showing the Core's violent energy spikes. "A stabilized reserve is… acceptable compensation," she said aloud, though her tone suggested it was a distant second prize. To her lead engineer, she whispered, her voice feverish with intent, "Deploy every sensor we have. I want a full spectral analysis of its transformation sequence. This is an unprecedented chance to observe a primordial energy state achieving consciousness. The data is the real treasure."







