Dead faces surrounded me in the darkness, their hollow eyes burning with accusation. The blonde girl stepped forward, her finger pointing straight at my chest.
"You let me die," she whispered, blood trickling from her lips. It felt suffocating, like air being sucked from my lungs. I gasped as their hands wrapped around my neck, squeezing it. I wanted to tell them it wasn't my fault, especially to the girl, but I couldn't find my voice. When I thought this was going to be my end, the blazing alarm shrieked through the dormitory, forcing my eyes to snap open. My chest hammered against my ribs. The nightmare clung like smoke, but I was grateful to escape those accusing stares. Soldiers marched in and stood at the entrance. "To the field in ten, nine..." one barked as we jumped from our beds. I got up, disoriented, then saw Tobi still snoring on the top bunk. "Really?" I muttered, shaking him until his eyes opened. "What's happening?" he groaned. "Get up." I pointed at the countdown soldier. He cursed and jumped from his bunk. We threw on uniforms and rushed out as the soldier hit one. More soldiers filled the corridors, yelling at stragglers. "Move! Move!" they chanted, forcing us to quicken our pace until we got outside where the harsh sunlight hit us like a slap. A soldier pointed to the track circling the compound. "Start jogging!" The command stunned everyone into silence. I cursed under my breath. "I can barely walk, and now I have to run?" "Why?" one brave boy called out. "You didn't tell us—" "Double laps for questions!" the soldier snapped. "Keep talking and we'll make it triple." The other soldiers snickered. One muttered, "Last year's set wasn't this chatty." A thin boy broke from the group and started running, destroying any hope of group resistance. "Traitor," Tobi hissed, and several boys echoed the sentiment. We gasped for air, throats dry, sweat burning our eyes. I couldn't wipe my face because touching my forehead wound would hurt more than the stinging salt. Across the field, we saw the girls march in formation. Even in drab uniforms, Nira looked radiant. Most boys collapsed on the scorching ground, chests heaving. A soldier approached our sprawled forms. "Who's got contraband? Energy bars? Stimulants?" Grumbles rose from the group. They could've asked that before torturing us. Another soldier stepped forward. "Confess now, or meet the trainer's wrath. Trust me, you don't want to be on Sergeant Kole's bad side." When they reached me, I shook my head. "Nothing." "Liars, all of you!" The first soldier spat. "Double the remaining laps!" Protests erupted until another soldier approached him "Sir, the general is in the building..." He paused, eyeing us, then pulled him aside. After whispering, the soldier sighed, dejected. "Go get ready for the day!" We raced toward the showers without a second thought. The decontamination was brutal, but at least some of the chemical residue washed off. Afterward, we headed to the cafeteria. It was massive that it can stack my cramped apartment ten times and there will still be space for more. We waited at the completely empty space until a cook emerged from the kitchen, wiping his hands. "There's nothing here, boys. You need to keep to time here. No exceptions." and walked away, leaving us stunned. "Great," Tobi muttered as we trudged toward the training center. "Adding starvation to my list of ‘what will they torture us with?’." "That's a sad list," another boy said. "You tell me," someone else added darkly. “Tobi must love torture to keep a tag on it.” “Shut up, Kingsley.” and turned to the other boy “You too, Danny.” which made them laugh. The training center doors loomed ahead. Inside, a mountain of a man stood waiting. Sergeant Kole looked like he could crush vehicles with his bare hands. Thick arms crossed over a chest that strained against his uniform. His shaved head gleamed under the fluorescent lights, and a scar ran from his left temple to his jaw. His eyes narrowed as we filed in. "Late." His voice could grind stone to dust. "You'll stay after training for extra punishment." The next hour was agony. Push-ups until our arms gave out, then more. Sit-ups until our stomachs cramped. Pull-ups that left our hands bleeding. My wounds screamed with every movement, but showing weakness meant more punishment. When the session finally ended, I could barely stand. The girls filed out first, heading to lunch. I watched them go, stomach gnawing at itself. If only I could ask someone to save me food, but fraternization was probably forbidden. Sergeant Kole stood over us, fists clenched, when Kambi appeared at his side. She whispered something urgent in his ear. He listened, his expression darkening further, then nodded curtly. Kambi turned to us. "Go take your lunch." We cheered and ran for the cafeteria, some boys even overtaking the girls in their desperation. The food served to us looked unappetizing but tasted tolerable. Tobi leaned close. "Some boys are talking about sneaking out after the next training." "What for?" "The Savior's Parade. Former champions marching back from missions outside the dome." His eyes lit up. "Want to come?" I hesitated. More rule-breaking seemed dangerous. "Come on," Tobi pressed. "Aren't you curious to see the ones who survived previous trials?" That got my attention. "Sure. I guess.” Tobi smiled." It's great to see those that were able to pass the experiment, heard it's tough but we got this." Honestly, I'm actually curious to see how these champions looked like. Do they look like gods? Untouched precious jewels? Unblemished treasures? We haven't seen anyone return home for a long time. Heck! No champion ever made it back since I was born and no body, not even the older generations, talk about any champion from my home Ark, so it's possible we haven't succeeded in pass the trial. Who knows if that's why we can't afford basic things despite working twice as hard. We don't have any champion to stand in the frontline and demand our rights to access the simplest things. Which made me question if what Xavier said was true? The thought twisted in my chest like a knife. Maybe Xavier was right. Maybe none of us here were going to survive. I was still lost in that dread when the cafeteria doors creaked open again. Everyone turned, expecting another soldier. Instead, an old man in rags shuffled in, his skin gray and thin as parchment. But his eyes… his eyes were hollow, empty as the dead girl from my nightmare. And when they locked on mine, he raised a trembling hand and pointed straight at me, eyes slammed open. “You,” he quivered, voice raw and broken. "What are you doing here? You aren't meant to be seen." As if by order, a column of soldiers marched in, boots thundering against the floor. At their center walked a man draped in a tailored suit. "Get him." he commanded, pointing at him. The frightened old man glanced back at me “You’re next! They are coming for you! You have to get the hell out of here—" he was interrupted when something was trapped on his mouth, muffling his sound. He looked at me one last time before the soldiers dragged him out as if he’d never been there. This odd feeling rubbed on me and I didn't like it. I was left with many questions and thoughts running through my mind but all fell back to one thought, I'm being targeted from someone I have no idea of.Latest Chapter
CHAPTER 144 — ALMOST THERE
It was massive. Easily as large as the queen ant had been. But this one was built for combat. Armored in layers of stone and organic plating. Six arms ending in claws that looked like they could shear through steel. A head that was more skull than flesh. And its eyes. Intelligent. Focused. Aware. This was the guardian. The protector of the three hearts. And it had been waiting for us. It clicked once. A sound like rocks grinding together. Then it charged. We split up. No discussion needed. Just instinct from too many battles. I went left. Casimir went right. The guardian had to choose. It chose me. Its claw came down like a falling boulder. I rolled under it. Came up slashing. My blade scraped against its armor. Barely scratched it. Too thick. Too protected. It spun. Faster than something that size should move. Another claw caught me in the ribs—the already-broken ones. I flew backward. Hit a heart chamber. Felt something inside me break. Couldn't breathe. Couldn't move. Th
CHAPTER 143 — THE TOXIC DEEP
Chapter 9: The Toxic DeepI thought of Cent and Vivi as we stood on that poisoned beach.My little siblings. Seven and nine years old. Still innocent. Still believing the adults would keep them safe. They'd never seen an ocean. Never felt sand beneath their feet. Never watched waves roll toward shore.They should see this. Not like this—not toxic, not deadly. But an ocean. Real water stretching to the horizon. The way it was supposed to be.The way it used to be, before the Fall."Kae." Casimir's voice pulled me back. "We need to keep moving."I tore my gaze from the ocean. Looked at the hives in the distance. Rocky formations built into cliffs. Ancient-looking. Waiting."How far?" My voice was barely a whisper.He checked his flickering interface. "Ten kilometers. Maybe less."Ten kilometers. Might as well be ten thousand. Every part of me was dissolving. The toxic water had accelerated the poisoning. My skin was covered in chemical burns. My lungs felt like they were filled with aci
CHAPTER 142 — THE DROWNING APPROACH
"We find it. We destroy it."He stood. Somehow. I didn't know how he was still moving. Didn't know how I was still moving."Can you walk?" he asked.I tested my legs. They barely responded. But I could stand. Could move."I can walk."We started down the corridor. Deeper into the hive. The bioluminescence grew brighter. The heartbeat louder.The corridor opened into a chamber.And I understood why they called it the water-hive.The chamber was filled with liquid. Not toxic water—something else. Something clear and bioluminescent. Like liquid light. It filled the chamber to about waist height.And floating in it—suspended in that glowing fluid—were pods. Hundreds of them. Each one containing something. Growing. Developing."It's a nursery," Casimir said. "They're growing more mutants here."We waded into the fluid. It was warm. Almost comfortable. So different from the toxic water outside.But as we moved deeper, the pods around us began to pulse. To react to our presence.Something in
CHAPTER 141 — THE KILLSWITCH PUPPET
I felt my entire muscles were threatening to rip off my body as the pain was becoming unbearable ever since I gained consciousness again. Before me was Shen whose face was distorted, with her smile still being wide and predatory. "Tell me, Kae," she purred, tapping a long fingernail against the stand that held me hostage. "How did you tame it?" "Tame what?" I asked, pretending to know what she meant. "That mutant that you named....." she paused, before she snorted as though she was trying to hold her laugh. "Echo." The entire lab burst into laugh with Shen stating how weird and funny the name was. "Of all the cool names to give it, it was Echo you thought of." and another burst of laughter sounded. I wonder what was so form with the name Echo but there's a reason behind that name. After she was done laughing, she wiped the tears off her eyes with her coat. "Such kind of mutant wasn't programmed for domesticity, but you did make me curious. How were you able to switch
CHAPTER 140 — ARCHITECT OF AGONY
The loop was a conveyor belt of tragedy. First, the cold shadow of the warehouse and the sneers of Sera’s bookies. Then, the frantic run through the ash. Finally, the sight of Tobi’s eyes going dull as the life left them, a sight that killed me as surely as the steam did. Over and over, I watched him die. I felt my own throat crushed as the toxins burned. Why only this? I thought, huddled in a memory of a dark alleyway while the bookies’ footsteps echoed. Why I'm I going through all these? These are memories I simply want to bury and forget that it ever existed. I then realized that this wasn't usual. My memories skipping each time made me understand that I was being trapped in my own memories. The fact that I am only shown the terrible painful memories had made me have enough. "I'm not running anymore," I whispered. I decided that I am going to break this script. In the next loop, before Tobi could even speak, I did something that felt like tearing my own soul out. I struck h
CHAPTER 139 — THE LABYRINTH OF THE MIND
The interior of the behemoth wasn't only looking like a stomach; it felt more like it was a living, pulsing nightmare of biology. An error that wasn't even supposed to happen in the first place. As I was swallowed, the sensation of falling was replaced by the wet, rhythmic grinding of muscular walls. My already shattered body was dragged across slick, acidic surfaces that hissed against my skin. A touch of it sent burning sensation wash all over my body like it was burrowing hole into it. It felt like I was being washed inside fire. Suddenly, the internal walls convulsed and from the darkness, a single, whip-like appendage shot out. It looks like a translucent, sickly violet tentacle, that was veined with a pulsing neon light that suggested a nervous system far more complex than any animal's. I gathered every ounce of strength I had left, my fingers digging into the rubbery flesh of the tentacle. I'm trying to holdon with a death grip as quickly as possible to avoid getting cl
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