
Shihab, a 20 years old guy let out a deep sigh, his brow slick with sweat, he tightened his grip on the sanding tool. The rhythmic sound of the sandpaper against the wood was a familiar comfort, a small island of control in a sea of hardship. He worked tirelessly, the extra hours his boos forced him to do were a heavy weight on his already weary shoulders. His colleagues, a pack of wolves in sheep's clothing, had once again turned on him, their accusations stinging. They broke a machine and blamed it on him, he tried to explain the situation but his boss wouldn't believe him, as a punishment he forced him to work an extra shift... it all felt like another cruel twist of fate.
As the sun went down. The usual cacophony of machinery and chatter faded, everyone left to go home to their families leaving him behind. He glanced at the clock after hours of hard work. It was almost midnight. Another four hours to go. Suddenly, a strange noise sliced through the silence. A loud groan, followed by a metallic clang. Shihab froze, his heart pounding against his chest. He strained to listen, his senses on high alert. "What was that?" he muttered to himself, his voice barely a whisper. Then came the screaming. It started as a distant wail, quickly escalating into a chorus of terror. The sounds grew closer, echoing through the vast factory, accompanied by the sickening crunch of something being broken. Fear, cold and sharp, pierced through Shahab's exhaustion. He cautiously moved towards the factory door, his hand trembling as he reached for the handle. Peeking outside, he saw a horrifying scene unfold. People were running, their faces contorted in terror, their cries lost in the growing chaos. And then he saw them. Figures, stumbling and grotesque, with eyes that burned with an unnatural hunger. They were Zombies. He gasped, his breath catching in his throat. "Impossible!" he whispered, Shihab stumbled backward, his mind reeling."Zombies!" The word, ripped from the pages of horror movies, echoed in the sudden silence. He’d always dismissed them as fictional monsters, a product of someone's twisted imagination. Now, they were here, outside, a terrifying reality. He slammed the factory door shut, the heavy metal echoing with a finality that did little to soothe his fear. "This can't be happening," he muttered, his voice barely audible. He moved quickly, his movements backed by a primal instinct for survival. He locked every door he could find, the click of each lock a small victory amidst the horror. He knew he had to find a secure place, a sanctuary from the nightmare that had unfolded. The manager's office, with its reinforced door and high-up window, seemed the best option. Once inside, he went to the window and peered out. The street was a scene of chaos, bodies strewn about, the undead shuffling and feasting. He fumbled for his phone, his fingers clumsy with panic. He needed to know if his family was safe. He called his mother first, his heart pounding with each ring. She didn't answer. Then he called his brother, a growing knot of panic tightening in his stomach. Still nothing. He frantically dialed the numbers of his other siblings, a desperate plea for a connection, a sign of life. But all he got was the cold, impersonal voice of voicemail. "Please, answer," he whispered, his voice cracking. He was paralyzed by fear, the image of his family in danger burned into his mind. He didn't know what to do, where to go. The weight of his responsibility, the need to protect them, pressed down on him. Then he heard it. A relentless, rhythmic pounding. It started as a dull thud and grew into a deafening barrage. He crept towards the stairs, his every sense on high alert. He peered down. The main factory door. The zombies were at the door, their decaying hands clawing and scratching, their relentless banging threatening to break through. Terror seized him. He scrambled for anything he could find, dragging heavy equipment, tools, and anything he could find to barricade the door. But the relentless pounding continued, the wood groaning under the relentless assault. He knew it wouldn't hold. He retreated, his breath coming in ragged gasps. He had to get back to the office. He scrambled back up the stairs, stumbling and falling, his eyes darting around, searching for any sign of movement. He dove under the manager's desk, curling into a fetal position, the cold, hard wood offering little comfort. "What do I do?" he whispered into the silence, the question hanging in the air, unanswered, as the relentless pounding on the door below continued. Hidden beneath the desk, the harsh reality of his situation crashed over Shihab in a suffocating wave. Tears streamed down his face, hot and bitter, as he whispered, "I can't believe it , is this the end for mr?" The words were a desperate plea, a lament for a life unlived, a future stolen. "Am I going to die in this factory, at such a young age? As a failure?'" He replayed his life, a rapid montage of missed opportunities and crushing disappointments. Four years in the factory, a constant grind, a dead-end job. No promotion, no better prospects. The money he earned barely kept his family afloat, his mother still battling her illness. He yearned for more, for the dreams he’d been forced to abandon. He longed to go to university, to play football, to graduate and become an engineer, to work in a respected company, to marry and have a family. He wanted to care for his mother and provide for his brothers, to give them a life free from hardship. "will I ever see them again? Will I die here? who will support them after I die!" The thought was a physical blow, a crushing weight on his chest. Yet, amidst the despair, a flicker of defiance ignited within him. The thought of his family, their faces etched in his memory, pushed him into action. He wouldn't give up. He couldn't. He had to find a way out. He wiped his tears, the despair replaced by a steely determination. He had to survive. He had to try. He cautiously peeked out from under the desk, his eyes scanning the office for any possible escape route. The roof. He had to get to the roof. He crept out of the office and started to move towards the roof, each step was a battle against the fear that threatened to paralyze him. Reaching the roof access, he cautiously pushed the door open and peered out. The factory, once a place of work, was now a prison. The factory was surrounded. Zombies, a sea of rotting flesh and gnashing teeth, were everywhere. They were shuffling, shambling, a relentless tide of the undead, their eyes locked on the building, their hunger insatiable. Escape seemed impossible. But Shihab knew, with a chilling certainty, that he had to try. The factory entrance below was swarming with the undead, a gruesome site of moaning figures. Escape was his only option. He inhaled deeply, a desperate prayer on his lips, and sprinted towards the edge. With a surge of adrenaline, he leaped, soaring through the air before crashing onto the adjacent building. Pain lanced through him as he hit the ground, a searing reminder of his fall. He pushed himself up, ignoring the throbbing in his leg, and took another breath. The next jump was crucial. He reached the edge again, grasped the edge, and hauled himself up, his muscles screaming in protest. One more rooftop separated him from the relative safety of the mountain and the forest beyond. He knew the zombies were drawn to the city, to the concentration of human scent. The forest, by comparison, was a haven. He sprinted, his legs burning, toward the final jump. But exhaustion, the relentless enemy, had caught up to him. The distance was farther than he'd realized. His jump fell short. He plummeted, the world tilting violently before his vision exploded with pain. The scent of his blood, a siren's call, drew the horde. They converged, a ravenous tide. He struggled to crawl away, but his leg was broken, a useless weight. Despair washed over him, a bitter wave. Tears streamed down his face, a silent testament to his failure. "I'm sorry, Mom," he choked out, the words a broken promise, "I won't be able to help you do the surgery... I failed you." Then, a screen materialized before his eyes, shimmering in the air. Two options glowed: [ You Have Been Selected By The System. You Have Two Options: 1_ Become a Zombie Hunter - Gain new strength and weapons or 2_Decline and Die.]Latest Chapter
Chapter 73 A Devil's Bargain
The satellite phone's chirp was a sound that always sent a jolt through Shihab, a tether to the most precious part of his heart that was far away. He answered it in the quiet of his quarters, his voice softening instantly. "Ayham?""Hey, brother," Ayham's voice came through, clearer and stronger than it had been in months. The background noise was the gentle crash of waves, a sound unimaginable in the dust of the city. "Just checking in. How's the empire building?"A genuine smile spread across Shihab's face. For the next half-hour, he talked. He didn't give a leader's report; he gave a brother's story. He told him about the wall, stone by backbreaking stone. He described Ibtihal and her tech, the clash and eventual fusion. He talked about the near-disaster at the landfill, leaving out no detail of his own foolishness, and the humbling rescue. He told him about Zayn and Layan, about Dr. Sami and the clay filters, about the football games in the dust. He painted a picture not just of s
Chapter 72 A Real Team
The journey back from the landfill was a somber affair, but the silence was soon broken by Karam. Leaning against the seat in the truck, he let out an exaggerated sigh.“You know,” he began, his voice carrying through the cabin, “I’ve seen some crazy plans. The bus jump. The fire extinguisher on the roof. But trying to bury a thousand zombies under a mountain of garbage by yourself? That’s a new level of… let’s call it ‘creative problem-solving.’”A low chuckle rippled through the others. Ibtihal, her face still smudged with gunpowder residue, shook her head with a wry smile. “Statistically, it was an intriguing model. The funneling theory was sound. The failure point was the reliance on a single-point detonation trigger without a redundant backup. A rookie mistake, really.”“A rookie mistake from our fearless leader,” Jalal added, his tone dry but not unkind. “Next time you decide to single-handedly re-engineer the local topography, maybe run the wiring diagram by the class first?”S
Chapter 71 Saving The Hero
The pre-dawn air was cold and still, thick with the smell of damp earth and decay from the landfill bowl below. Shihab moved like a specter, placing Ibtihal’s acoustic emitters along the access road. Each one was set to activate in a staggered sequence, creating a piercing, irresistible siren song that would lead the dead on a forced march into his trap. In the narrow throat of the central trench, he and Jawad had spent the previous night secretly laying the electrostatic nets, their wires hidden under filth, connected to a single remote trigger in Shihab’s hand.He stood now on the northern rim, looking down at the silent pit. The zip-line was anchored behind him, its cable a faint glint in the gloom, leading to the safety of the opposite ridge where Jawad was supposedly positioned with a rifle. Shihab’s heart hammered against his ribs, a frantic drumbeat of fear and grim determination.“It’s time,” he whispered to himself, and pressed the first button on his makeshift controller.
Chapter 70 A Crazy Plan.
The decision was made, the contract rejected. Yet, like a ghost, it lingered. It haunted Shihab in the quiet moments. As he walked the rising wall at dawn, the rhythmic clink of trowels on stone seemed to whisper a thousand, a thousand, a thousand. When he reviewed their ledgers with Ibtihal in the evenings, the columns of scarcity screamed for a solution the gold mine promised.He began a silent, obsessive study. He pored over their inventory lists—ammunition counts, fuel reserves, medical supplies dwindling faster than they could scavenge. He listened intently to the reports from the port traders, men who sailed between fledgling sanctuaries on Al Noor Island and elsewhere. They spoke of a new economy emerging from the ruins, one running on bullets, antibiotics, fuel, and precious metals. A single gold coin, one trader claimed with a glint in his eye, could buy a crate of penicillin or a ton of seed grain from the agricultural communes springing up in the south.He watched the child
Chapter 69 The Tough Choice
The afternoon sun was warm, and the shouts of laughter were a medicine more potent than anything in the hospital. Shihab was in the middle of the dusty field that served as their football pitch, expertly dodging Zayn’s attempt to tackle him before passing the ball to a squealing Layan. The weight of command, the endless logistics of the wall, the silent pressure of a hundred lives depending on him—it all melted away in the simple, joyful chaos of the game. For a few precious minutes, he was just a big brother playing with the kids.Then, the world fractured at the edges. A familiar, cold blue light flickered, intruding upon the golden sunlight. The laughter, the shouts, the thud of the ball—all of it receded into a muffled hum as the translucent screen materialized directly in his line of sight.[New Contractual Proposal Generated]Objective: Eliminate one thousand (1000) zombies. Hostiles must be terminated within a 72-hour window following contract acceptance. Area of engagement is
Chapter 68 The Safe Zone
The northern reservoir mission had been more than a success; it had been a fusion. The clean water flowing into the hideout's storage tanks symbolized something purer than hydration, it was the lifeblood of a newly unified community. No longer the "Peace Seekers" and "Team X," they were now one entity, with a shared purpose that demanded a monumental new task: not just defending a hideout, but securing a future.Standing on the roof of their headquarters, now buzzing with coordinated activity, Shihab addressed the assembled group. Over a hundred faces looked back at him, seasoned fighters, brilliant engineers, hardened scavengers, and hopeful newcomers. The scale of what he was about to propose was written in the weary but determined lines of their faces."We have water," Shihab began, his voice carrying easily in the quiet morning air. "We have food growing. We have skills, and now, we have true strength in numbers. But we are still just an island in a sea of chaos. The hordes grow,
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