Zombie Domination-Chapter 369- Cease
The stale, cold air of the subway tunnel pressed in on them, a physical manifestation of the oppressive silence. The only light came from Specter’s violet eyes and a few hand-cranked lanterns—anything with a battery or energy cell was useless within fifty meters of their target’s last known location.
They had been tracking the ’Null’ for hours, following the void it carved in Specter’s sensorium. It was like chasing a ghost that erased the world behind it.
"This is wrong," Emma finally hissed, her voice loud in the unnatural quiet. She stamped out a small, frustrated flame in her palm that kept dying. "We’re walking into a freezer blind. We should have drawn it out. Lured it to a place we control."
"And how do you propose we lure something that is attracted to the absence of stimulus?" Celestia countered, her voice a clipped whisper. "Setting a trap requires bait it wants. It wants nothing. It consumes nothingness itself."
"Then we make it want something!" Emma shot back. "Veronica, can’t you enchant something to... I don’t know, scream psychically in reverse?"
"Don’t be absurd," Veronica snapped, though her eyes were scanning the darkness nervously. "My enchantments create order and structure in matter. What you’re suggesting is chaos. Besides, its field would just unravel anything I make the moment we got close."
"Zoe," Julian said, ignoring the argument for a moment. "Anything? Scent? Vibration?"
Zoe, who had been prowling ahead in her beast-form, paused. Her ears were flat against her skull. "No hunt-smell. No fear-smell. Only... cold stone. And dead air. It is not a beast. It is a hole." Her frustration was palpable; every instinct she relied on was nullified.
Clarissa shivered, wrapping her arms around herself. "The theory... Beatrix’s theory from the data. If the null-field suppresses aggressive psionic activity, forcing the Virus into a low-energy state... what if this ’Null’ isn’t just feeding on the quiet? What if it’s... what if it’s the Virus’s attempt to process it? To weaponize the suppression itself?"
The idea landed heavily. They weren’t hunting a mutant. They were hunting the world’s immune response turned septic.
"That would imply a level of systemic, adaptive intelligence we haven’t seen before," Beatrix’s voice crackled weakly over a hard-line field phone they’d strung behind them, the only comms that worked in the dampening field. "But the data from the valley suggested the suppression field was passive, environmental. If the Virus has evolved an active agent that can project and weaponize that field... its potential is catastrophic. It wouldn’t just disable technology. Prolonged exposure could suppress autonomic nervous functions. Induce coma. Brain death."
"A skill," Fey’s voice came over the line, tinged with static. "You’re saying this thing might have developed a skill. Like our blessings, but born from the corrupted code and the null-field. A... a Passive Nullification aura. Or worse, an Active Suppression pulse."
The word ’skill’ changed everything. They had fought monsters driven by instinct, rage, or psychic command. A monster with a directed, intelligent ability was a different class of threat.
"Specter," Julian asked quietly. "Your analysis of the field’s effect on your systems?"
"Progressive degradation of external sensor suites and non-essential processes. Core combat chassis and primary processors are shielded, but operating at reduced efficiency. The field is not merely an absence. It has a... texture. A directed pressure. It is attempting to enforce stasis. Beatrix’s hypothesis of an active skill has a 78% probability of being correct."
"Great," Veronica muttered. "So we’re chasing a walking, predatory off-switch."
"Julian, we need to reconsider the engagement," Celestia stated, her tactical mind overriding pride. "We brought energy weapons, explosives, enchanted gear—all things this entity is specifically adapted to negate. Even Specter is impaired. Zoe is our only fully functional combatant, and she can’t track it. We are operating blind in its ideal environment."
"So we fall back? Let it grow stronger? Let it maybe learn to find the source of the null-field broadcast?" Emma challenged.
"We don’t fall back," Julian said, his voice cutting through the debate. He had been silent, processing. "We adapt. Right now." He turned to Clarissa. "Your telekinesis. It’s a force of will applied to base matter. It’s psionic, but not energetic in a way their tech or mutant biology understands. Correct?"
Clarissa nodded, unsure. "I... I think so. It’s not heat or electricity. It’s just... force."
"And you," he looked at Zoe. "Your strength, speed, senses. They’re biological augmentation. Not external energy."
Another nod, a low growl of agreement.
"Specter, your core physical systems—hydraulics, synthetic muscle, alloy frame. They are mechanical, not electronic, correct? The null-field shouldn’t stop a piston from firing."
"Correct. My physical articulation is independent of vulnerable circuitry. It will function."
"Then we have our weapons," Julian said, a cold plan forming. "We abandon everything else. No guns, no tech, no enchants. Clarissa, you are our artillery and our shield. You throw rock, you reinforce tunnels, you create barriers. Zoe, you are our striker. Specter, you are our anvil. You close, you grapple, you contain. Celestia, you coordinate. Veronica, Emma—you are support only if the field breaks. Otherwise, you fall back."
It was a plan of brutal, primitive simplicity. A regression to fists, stone, and raw force.
"And you?" Celestia asked.
Julian flexed his hand. Void’s Edge, with its nullifier core, was useless here—it might even resonate dangerously with the Null’s field. He would rely on Gravity and his own enhanced physicality, skills rooted in manipulating fundamental forces, not expendable energy. "I’ll be the hammer."
They stripped their gear, leaving piles of sophisticated weaponry in the tunnel. Armed with rock clubs, reinforced cables, and their own bodies, they felt terrifyingly vulnerable.
They moved forward, the silence deepening until even their heartbeats felt muffled. The cold intensified, seeping into their bones.
Then, Specter stopped. Her violet eyes fixed on a point ahead where the tunnel widened into a maintenance vault. "The anomaly is stationary. Twenty meters ahead. The suppression field is at its maximum intensity."
In the gloom, they saw it. The Null. It was tall, emaciated, its glassy skin reflecting no light, only seeming to drink it. It stood perfectly still in the center of the vault, surrounded by the frozen, greyed-out forms of several Tech-Savant and Ironblood victims, their bodies covered in a fine, crystalline frost. It wasn’t feeding. It was just... being. A perfect, absolute monument to stillness.
As they watched, it slowly turned its featureless head towards them. No eyes, no mouth. Just a smooth, obsidian plane.
It took a silent step forward.
And the world didn’t just go quiet. It went dead.
The last flicker from their lanterns died. The faint hum of Specter’s systems vanished, leaving only the soft whir of hidden hydraulics. Clarissa gasped, the mental ’muscle’ of her telekinesis feeling stiff, sluggish, as if pushing through frozen oil.
It wasn’t just disabling their tools. It was suppressing their skills.
The Null raised a glassy hand. Not to attack. To point. At Julian.
And in the absolute void of sound and sensation, a single, clear, psychic impression slammed into Julian’s mind—not words, but pure, sterile intent:
Cease.
The command wasn’t hostile. It was corrective. As if switching off a malfunctioning machine.
Their theories were horrifyingly correct. This was no mere predator. It was an enforcer. And it had just identified the source of the unwanted ’noise’ in its new, quiet world.
The real battle wasn’t for resources, or even survival anymore.
It was for the right to exist at all.The oppressive silence became a physical weight. Clarissa’s telekinetic grip on a loose chunk of concrete faltered, the rock slumping to the ground as if her will was a muscle succumbing to frostbite. Emma tried to summon a spark—a tiny defiance—but only a wisp of smoke curled from her fingertip before dying. Veronica felt the intricate metaphysical structure of an enchantment she’d been holding ready simply... unravel, its pattern dissolving into the stagnant void.
A cold sweat, different from the tunnel’s chill, broke out on their skin. It was the terror of being disarmed from the inside out.
"Steady," Julian’s voice cut through the rising panic, low and absolute. It was a command wrapped in ice, mirroring the environment. "The plan stands. Its field weakens effects; it does not erase your training or your bodies. Clarissa, you don’t need to lift a boulder. Flick a pebble. Guide a fall. Zoe, your claws are still sharp. Your legs are still strong. Specter, your hydraulics don’t run on luck. Move."
His words were a lifeline of purpose. They forced focus back to the immediate, the physical. Clarissa, breathing hard, narrowed her focus from lifting to nudging. A small stone near the Null’s foot skittered, a trivial distraction. Zoe, shaking her head as if to clear a fog, dropped into a crouch, her muscles coiling with biological certainty.
Then, a new vibration. At Julian’s hip, Void’s Edge began to hum. Not its usual nullifier resonance, but a deeper, dissonant thrum, as if the blade’s core was a tuning fork struck by the Null’s absolute silence. The black metal seemed to drink the faint violet light from Specter’s eyes, becoming a slit of deeper darkness. It was resonating with the void, but out of phase—a wrong note in the stillness.
’Interesting,’ Julian thought, his mind a cold engine even as a profound, existential chill seeped from the Null into his very bones. This wasn’t the chill of temperature, but of consequence. Of being judged irrelevant by a universe bending towards absolute zero. The Null wasn’t just a monster. It was the embodiment of the quiet they had begged for, turned sentient and corrective.
The Null’s blank, glassy ’face’ remained fixed on Julian. The psychic command Cease still echoed in his skull, a sterile edict. It took another silent step, then another, its movement utterly fluid and without sound. The crystalline frost around its victims seemed to pulse.
The tension snapped.
The Null didn’t charge. It flowed. One moment it was ten meters away, the next it was within arm’s reach of Zoe, a glassy hand extending to brush her arm. There was no malice, only a terrible, efficient intent to still.
Zoe roared, a raw sound of defiance that was instantly muffled by the dead air. She dodged, not with her usual beastial grace, but with a desperate, visceral lunge. The Null’s fingers grazed her fur, and where they touched, the vibrant russet and gold turned grey and brittle, as if the life and color were being siphoned away.
"Now!" Julian barked.
Specter moved. Without her sensor suite, she relied on pre-calculated trajectories. She didn’t attack the Null directly. She slammed into the tunnel wall beside it, her piston-driven fist striking a pre-existing fissure. The calculated impact dislodged a shower of rock and dust, not to harm, but to obscure and disrupt the entity’s perceptual field.
In that half-second of disrupted stillness, Julian acted. He didn’t draw Void’s Edge; its resonance was too unpredictable. He closed the distance, Gravity twisting around his fist not as a projectile, but as a localized compression of space, aiming to crush the Null’s slender leg. The field resisted, his power feeling sluggish, like pushing through hardening cement, but it landed.
The Null’s leg cracked, not like bone, but like ice. A web of fractures spread up its glassy limb. It didn’t cry out. It simply pivoted, its other hand swinging towards Julian with that same passive, deadly intent.
Clarissa, teeth gritted, found a sliver of her power. Not enough to lift a barrier, but enough to tug on Julian’s jacket from behind. It was a minuscule force, just a few pounds of pull, but perfectly timed. It yanked him an inch off-balance. The Null’s freezing touch missed his chest, instead grazing his raised forearm.
Agony. A cold so profound it burned. Not just numbness, but a feeling of erasure. The skin turned grey, the muscles beneath seizing. His Indomitable Body fought the effect, the tissue desperately trying to regenerate against the tide of nothingness, creating a horrific, warring sensation of fire and ice.
The Null, its leg compromised, tilted its head. It seemed to analyze the interference—Specter’s physical disruption, Clarissa’s feeble tug, Julian’s resistant biology. The psychic pressure in the room spiked, no longer a command, but a query laced with a chilling promise of finality.
’Why do you resist cessation? You are the anomaly. Be still.’







