Zombie Domination-Chapter 357- Unstable
The climb back out of the Blackstone Mine was a frantic, shadow-haunted sprint. The groans of the wounded hive followed them, a psychic aftershock of pain and rage that made the very stone tremble. Fey’s charges detonated behind them with a series of muffled crump sounds, collapsing the access tunnel and sealing the corrupted cavern—for now.
They burst out into the fading daylight, lungs burning, covered in grime, ichor, and a fine, sparkling dust that was the residue of the drained energy pool. The cleanish air was a shocking relief after the mine’s psychic and physical miasma.
Back at the warehouse, the atmosphere was a mix of exhaustion and tense triumph. The team peeled off their gear, the adrenaline crash leaving them shaky. Beatrix and Clarissa immediately began tending to minor wounds and signs of psychic fatigue, using a combination of first aid and Clarissa’s gentle, reassuring presence.
The data was the priority. Thorne’s crystal tags, now dark and inert, were slotted into an analyzer. The readings were chaotic but revelatory.
"The ’Origin-code’ signature is incredibly strong," Beatrix reported, circles under her eyes but her voice buzzing with intensity. "It’s not just a contaminant in the Virus; it’s the framework. The Virus is using it as a... a blueprint for mutation. The pool was a focal point, a crucible where raw biological matter and this alien code were being mashed together to produce those advanced mutants."
Fey, examining the residual energy signatures Specter had absorbed, nodded grimly. "And the interference field? It’s a byproduct. The corrupted Seed energy and the psychic resonance of the hive mind create a localized reality distortion. It’s not designed to kill tech; it’s just the environment screaming in pain. Aya, your ore sample," she handed over a lump of dark, strangely warm rock, "is saturated with it."
Aya took it reverently. "I can work with this. If I can refine it, maybe we can make localized dampeners. Or... even weapons that disrupt the Virus’s connection to the code."
Meanwhile, Specter stood silently in her usual spot, recharging from a direct link to their secured Aethel reserve. The corrupted energy she’d absorbed had been safely purged and converted. Julian watched her, then approached.
"Your performance was adequate," he stated. It was high praise from him. "Your analysis of the mutant’s weakness was correct and crucial."
Specter’s red eyes focused on him. "The tactical variable was identified and exploited. Unit efficiency met parameters. However, a query arises: The Thralls. They were non-combatant biological failures. Their elimination was not necessary for objective completion, yet it occurred. Was this optimal resource expenditure?"
The question was so cold, so purely logical, it gave even Julian pause. She was analyzing the morality—or rather, the efficiency—of killing the helpless.
"They were part of the hive’s infrastructure. Removing them weakens the system’s ability to recover," he answered, justifying it tactically.
"Understood. Future engagements will include analysis of enemy support infrastructure for strategic value." She filed the lesson away, another data point in her programming.
Later that evening, as the team shared a sparse but warm meal, the events in the mine processed in quieter ways.
"That thing... the Kinetic," Emma said, shivering despite the warmth of the stew. "It wasn’t just a monster. It was thinking. Planning. It used the Brutes like tools."
"A hive mind with specialized cells," Celestia mused. "A sign of frightening advancement. The Virus is not random. It’s evolving with purpose."
"And that purpose seems to be tied to the same stuff the Arbiters are harvesting," Veronica added, swirling her drink. "We’re caught between a farmer who wants to grind us up for fertilizer and a... a cancer that wants to absorb us into its body."
Zoe, who had been unusually quiet, spoke up, her voice a low rumble. "The smell in the deep dark... it was old. Not just rot. Like something that had been sleeping for a long, long time, and was now having bad dreams." Her primal insight sent a new chill through the room.
Julian listened. They were piecing it together. The Origin-code was the common thread. The Seeds were one expression of it. The Virus was a corrupted, runaway expression. And humanity, with its anomalous "blessings," might be a third, unintended expression.
Their fragile coalition outside was also reacting. Magnus sent a terse message acknowledging the "noise" from the mine and requesting any salvageable high-grade explosives from the collapsed tunnels—a typical, pragmatic Magnus response. Thorne, however, was practically vibrating with desire for the raw data, offering more tech in exchange. Seth and Maya provided detailed sketches of other, smaller "quiet zones" that matched the mine’s pre-event energy profile—potential future hotspots.
A week after the mine operation, during a routine systems check, Specter made an unsolicited report.
"Master. Ongoing analysis of coalition communications and external signals has identified an anomaly. A low-frequency, encrypted data-stream, originating from the last known coordinates of the crashed Arbiter transport. It is not directed at any local faction. It is aimed skyward, on a repeating loop. The encryption matches... my former operational protocols."
Julian’s blood ran cold. A signal from the wreck. Using the Ghost’s own codes. It could only be one thing.
"The Arbiter," he said. "Or what’s left of it. It’s calling home."
"The signal contains a compressed log. Primary subjects: Catalytic Event at Blackstone Mine. Neutralization by unknown variables (designation: Julian’s group). Status of Asset: Ghost. Log reads: ’Asset compromised. Neural rewrite confirmed. Operating under hostile command. Code signature: Dominance-type anomaly.’ It concludes with a priority request: ’Request Nexus intervention. Request update on Reaper Protocol status. This sector is becoming... unstable.’"
The damaged Arbiter had survived. It had been hiding, watching, and was now trying to contact its superiors, reporting him as a "Dominance-type anomaly." And it was asking about the Reaper.
Julian looked at Specter, then at his team, then out at the darkening ruins. The fight for resources and survival had just become a race against time.
They had to find that crashed Arbiter and silence it for good, and they had to do it before its call was answered.







