Chapter 124: Chapter 120: Picking Up The Pieces
Allison stood rigid near the shattered poly-glass window. Her hands shook with violent, uncontrollable tremors. The heavy tectonic rifle rattled against her ceramic chest plating. The raw adrenaline bled out of her veins, leaving a hollow, freezing rot in her stomach. A jagged red warning burned directly into her left retina.
[Debuff: Adrenaline Collapse. Motor Functions Impaired.]
"The Sector 300 bulkheads are rated for four thousand PSI," Allison said. Her voice ran at a frantic, breathless clip. She stared directly at the small pile of white powder resting near the deep-earth lever. "We have a hairline fracture on the western seal. The saltwater will eat the structural iron in exactly seventy-two hours. If the pressure breaches the primary generators, the resulting electrical arc will vaporize Sector 200. I need to calculate the precise thermal expansion of the rebar."
Maddie stepped over a gutted wireframe console. "Drop the gun."
"I can jumpstart the backup relays. I just need a conductive conduit and enough raw mana to bypass the safety locks." Allison gripped the synthetic stock tighter. "Recalculating the load-bearing stress on the marble takes time I don’t have."
"Your safety relays blew out three hours ago." Maddie dropped the heavy SantaMon halberd to the floorboards. The fossilized highway sign clanked against the synthetic stone. "Your math assumes we are trying to fix a pristine corporate skyscraper. We live in a flooded sewer. The iron holds today. Let go of the rifle."
The architect did not move.
Maddie closed the distance. She grabbed Allison’s forearms and physically pried the stiff fingers off the synthetic grip, one rigid digit at a time. The heavy tectonic rifle hit the floor.
She dragged Allison into the adjacent hydroponics bay. Maddie forced the heavy-set architect down onto the cold tile next to a ruptured filtration tank. A rusted water pipe hissed violently as the frontline fighter cranked the iron valve.
Freezing, unfiltered water blasted out of the spigot. Maddie shoved Allison’s head directly under the current.
The liquid smelled heavily of sulfur and crushed stone. It washed over the cracked ceramic plating on Allison’s chest, soaking into the thick synthetic weave of her undershirt.
"You have engine grease permanently fused to your scalp," Maddie said, digging her thumbs into the bleached blonde hair. "The water is barely cutting it."
Allison flinched against the biting cold. "Your grip strength is pathetic. My left side is still completely coated in ash. Are you afraid to ruin your manicure?"
Maddie glanced at the thick, blood-soaked athletic tape wrapping her own blistered hands. She had torn three fingernails backward ripping the halberd out of a dead guard’s grip. She didn’t have a manicure. She operated a biological disaster zone.
"I’ll rip the hair out by the roots if you keep critiquing my form."
"I have an adrenaline collapse debuff burning a red hole in my left retina." Allison spat a mouthful of dirty water onto the tiles. "Scrub harder."
Maddie leaned into it, scraping her calloused hands against Allison’s skull. "You smell like cooked copper wire and deep-earth salt. Stop twitching."
"The freezing water is shocking my nervous system. It is an involuntary muscle contraction."
"It’s annoying. Hold still."
"Are you going to rip the skin off my scalp too?" Allison asked, her voice vibrating against the metal pipe.
"If it gets the ash out, yes." Maddie scraped her nails against the ceramic plating on Allison’s neck. "You can’t walk around the survivors looking dead. They need to see the Vanguard breathing."
"They need a working water filtration system."
"They need you to stop calculating the water pressure and just bleed with them."
Allison pulled her head back. "I bled enough today."
"Then bleed tomorrow," Maddie said. "But you don’t get to check out of the war just because the math changed."
The biting banter died in the freezing draft. Allison finally stopped fighting the heavy water pressure and slumped forward against the metal piping. Thick gray sludge washed off the bleached blonde strands and spiraled down the rusted drain.
Will Wick stood entirely alone in the Tactical Suite.
The absolute lack of incoming artillery pressed against his eardrums. He heard the ragged intake of his own breath and the steady dripping of phantom oil from the dead console. The silence carried a crushing physical weight.
He dragged his boots across the ruined synthetic marble. Deep-earth mud caked against the heavy tread. The air tasted like stagnant salt and dried blood. He bypassed a gutted corporate wireframe console, the phantom gears grinding against his skin.
The heavy iron roots of the bunker groaned. The mega-city shifted on its tectonic plates, settling into the dirt.
A blinding, pristine blue notification violently hijacked his vision. The sociopathic perfection of the System ignored the blood staining his jacket. It calculated the exact numeric value of the Sovereign’s ascension in flawless, unbroken font.
[Leviathan Protocol Terminated. Continental Threat Diverted.]
[Experience Distributed: Level 34 Achieved.]
[Warlord Evolution Unlocked: Deep-Earth Sovereign.]
[Silo Management Authority: Alpha Core Synchronized.]
The pristine, glowing letters hovered in the cold air. They represented absolute power. They meant absolutely nothing.
Will swiped his bruised hand through the flawless projection, shattering the holographic text into digital static. The heavy metal of the Sovereign Core-Band pulled tight across his right wrist. The title was a dense, physical ache pressing down on his skeleton. He drowned six hundred people to buy the silence in this room and the System gave him a level up.
He walked over to Vance’s shattered mahogany desk. A pristine, untouched crystal whiskey glass sat inches away from the white ash.
Will picked it up. He rolled the perfectly smooth poly-glass between his bruised, blood-stained fingers. The sterile corporate artifact felt exactly like the unfeeling System UI. Tossing his shoulder back, he hurled the cup directly into the marble wall.
The glass shattered into a thousand jagged pieces. The sharp noise violently broke the quiet.
Heavy ancient iron plates clanked together in the jaundiced light.
Genghis Khan’s towering spectral form solidified behind the desk. The warlord stared directly at the white powder staining the floorboards. He dropped a heavy, armored gauntlet onto Will’s shoulder, driving the Sovereign’s boots hard against the synthetic marble.
"The System rewards the butcher," Khan said.
Will ground his teeth against the sheer gravity of the spectral hand. "I dropped a thousand tons of iron on six hundred of our own people. I drowned the mechanics to save the suits in the upper rings."
"You secured the walls." Khan’s spectral armor shifted, the metal groaning. "The blood of the weak paves the road for the strong. This is the absolute truth of conquest."
"It wasn’t a conquest. It was a slaughterhouse."
"It was a decision." Khan dug his iron fingers into Will’s collarbone. "You wear the Sovereign Core-Band. You do not get the luxury of regret. Regret is a rot that kills the king before the assassin even draws a blade."
"Vance built the bunker. He pulled the radioactive trigger." Will pointed a bruised finger at the white ash. "He paid the price, not me."
"He was a merchant protecting his inventory," Khan said. "You are the warlord who inherited the earth. Do not insult his sacrifice by wishing the arithmetic favored the cowards."
"I don’t wish for anything. I just want the ringing to stop."
"The ringing never stops. You just learn to hear the enemy moving through it."
The sharp metallic clack of a sidearm slide cut through the tension.
Will pivoted on pure muscle memory. He leveled the scavenged pistol toward the dark window. A shadow detached from the dead space.
Zeraya stepped into the flickering bioluminescence. She had stripped off her pristine gold corporate armor, replacing it with a faded red mechanic’s jersey. A rusted Tutorial sword hung strapped to her hip. Deep-earth mud heavily stained her boots.
"Your heavy-plate guards march too loud," Zeraya said.
Will kept the iron sights trained on her chest. "Tyson locked down the main artery. Nobody walks up that stairwell."
"He leaves a full three-second blind spot when he pivots his bad shoulder to the left." Zeraya tracked wet mud across the synthetic marble. "The lower-ring mechanics don’t use the arteries. We use the ventilation shafts. Maya is already moving her people into Sector 300 to claim the armory scraps."
"She lost her blood today. Let her scavenge."
"She isn’t scavenging." Zeraya stopped two feet from the barrel of the gun. "She is dragging heavy industrial welders down the service ladders. She is cutting Sector 300 off from the primary grid entirely."
"I gave the order to seal the water out," Will said.
"She isn’t sealing the water out. She is sealing you out. She knows exactly how many mechanics you drowned to save the upper rings. Maya doesn’t trust the Sovereign’s math. You have a kingdom, but she is locking down the basement."
"She has no food down there."
"She has the deep-earth hydroponic reserves and three hundred rusted pipe-rifles." Zeraya tilted her head. "She isn’t going to starve. She is going to build a secondary kingdom in the flooded dark, and she is going to point those rifles straight up the Axis." freewebnσvel.cøm
Will lowered the gun. "I am not fighting a civil war today."
"You don’t get to schedule the war." Zeraya unbuckled the rusted Tutorial sword and slammed it onto the desk.
Will’s rusted interface surged. A jagged red warning overwrote his pristine level-up screen, violently bleeding across his retinas.
[Faction Alert: Territory Contested.]
[Sovereign Authority in Sector 300 Revoked.]
Will stared at the bleeding digital text. He racked the slide of his pistol and chambered a fresh round.