Major Kealen stooped, picking up a sharp piece of quartz from the jungle floor. He used it to chip away deliberately at the exposed vein of raw gold. He raised the resultant nuggets, turning them over in the dappled light, his gaze devoid of awe, tainted only by profound despair.
"What is the essence of this wealth?" he muttered, his voice echoing through the dense canopy. "Riches given to a man trapped in a forest that has no end, a man who knows no freedom. The universe decides to bless me with this prosperity when it is no longer useful to me. The forest is now my territory, my new home. I don't need this. Let the universe grant me freedom instead."
The tiger, his watched him as he poure out his anger, still bleeding heavily from the deep wound.
Kealen instantly recognized his duty. He began his familiar search for the specific medicinal herbs he routinely used to treat his wild ally. He located the serrated leaves of the Rattlesnake Plantain, quickly harvesting a handful. He crushed and squeezed the fibrous material, applying the acidic juice directly onto the deep laceration. The pain was immediate and excruciating. The tiger roared, a sound that shook the humid air, and bolted into the dense undergrowth, disappearing instantly.
Kealen smiled thinly. He knew the remedy stung, but he couldn't grasp why the tiger had reacted so violently this time; it had remained docile when he treated the python bite earlier. Ignoring his confusion, he followed the rough trail the tiger had left, unwilling to lose the only reliable face that matters to him.
After only a short distance, Kealen stopped. He couldn't trust his own senses. Through the trees, a small patch of sunlight spilled onto a remarkably neat, cleared area, and within it stood a well-built wooden hut. It was pristine, an anomaly of structure and order in the chaotic jungle.
He rushed forward, a desperate hope surging through him. If it was a spirit dwelling, or a hideout for drug runners, he didn't care. He craved any vestige of humanity. He was done submitting to the jungle's tyranny; either they would accept him, or they would have to fight him for possession of this civilized sanctuary.
Kealen found the hut secured by a heavy-duty padlock. A thorough perimeter search yielded no immediate inhabitants, yet the evidence of recent human activity was everywhere. He noted a roughly flattened and blackened area where a heavy-lift helicopter must have landed, perhaps within the last week.
Without hesitation, Kealen found a sizable rock and smashed the padlock off the latch with two deliberate, heavy blows. He stepped inside, his military training instantly cataloging the contents.
This wasn't a recreational camp; it was a professional gold mining operation. Everything was high-grade: sealed supplies, powerful communications gear, and specialized excavation tools.
It was now clear: these prospectors were the ones who had cleared the land where he found the rich gold deposits. He knew they would return soon.
Kealen decided then and there that this hut was his extraction point. He would wait for their return and fight, negotiate, or simply force his way out of this hell. He was completely aware that gold miners operating in isolated regions were perhaps the most dangerous civilians on earth; they viewed any unauthorized presence near their claim as a lethal threat. He knew their protocol was to shoot first and never ask questions.
But he promised himself that it was better to be killed by a human in a tactical confrontation, the death he had signed up for as a soldier, than to die lonely and consumed by the wilderness, or ripped apart by a wild animal.
"The universe has done it once again," Kealen whispered, an overwhelming sense of relief washing over him. "It has provided me with a temporary heaven where everything needed for survival is here."
At that moment, the nagging worry about his injured tiger companion vanished, replaced entirely by the novelty of his environment.
He secured the broken door and explored the space. The miners had left behind untouched rations, canned goods, vacuum-sealed coffee, and, most importantly, a fully stocked medical kit. He located antiseptic wipes, powerful painkillers, and antibiotics. He quickly treated the myriad cuts and abrasions that covered his own body, ignoring the sharp sting of the solution.
Finally, he saw the cot. It was not a jungle hammock, but a proper, spring-coil bed topped with thick blankets. He collapsed onto it. The pain from his battered body still registered, but it was insignificant compared to the sheer luxury of lying on a manufactured surface, sheltered from the damp earth. The pain would soon fade, he believed.
Hours later, the adrenaline of the discovery subsided, replaced by a deep, strategic calm. Kealen rose and began a systematic reconnaissance of the hut's contents. He found maps marked with coordinates, detailed geological surveys, and a meticulously kept logbook.
The logbook confirmed his suspicions. The team, group of men and a security specialist, were flying back in five days to begin the main extraction phase. The location was designated "Alpha-09."
Kealen knew his timeline. Five days to formulate a plan. Five days to prepare the battleground.
He checked the communications equipment. The radio was a state-of-the-art satellite model, but the security specialist had removed a crucial component, the main power cell, making it inert. They weren't taking chances with anyone contacting the outside world.
Kealen moved to the exterior, his focus now shifting to defense. He needed to establish a perimeter for the few days left.
As he worked, his thoughts drifted back to the tiger. He felt a pang of guilt. He had abandoned his only friend for the promise of a soft bed. He knew the tiger would be licking its painful wound perhaps a mile away, recovering but angry. He needed the tiger. Not as a friend, but as an early warning system.
He left a fresh piece of venison he had hunted the previous day near the hut's entrance, a small peace offering.
On the third day, the air pressure dropped and a relentless tropical storm enveloped the forest. Kealen was snug inside the hut, listening to the drumming rain, planning escape routes. Suddenly, a noise cut through the downpour, not the wind, but a low, guttural growl, accompanied by the clatter of the venison being consumed.
The tiger was back. But it wasn't approaching for comfort; it was communicating hostility.
Kealen stepped outside, ignoring the blinding rain, carrying a small, powerful flashlight. The tiger was soaking wet, its eyes reflecting the beam with fierce intensity. The wound had scabbed over, confirming the painful medicine had worked.
"You're angry," Kealen observed calmly, addressing the massive creature as if it were a disgruntled comrade. "You don't like being healed, do you? But you came back. You know the jungle is safer with two of us."
The tiger didn't respond with affection, but with a warning snarl. It lingered only a moment longer, ensuring Kealen knew it was watching, before melting back into the deluge.
Kealen understood. The truce was conditional, maintained by shared survival and mutual need, not affection.
He returned to the hut, his plan solidifying around the date marked in the logbook. It remains 68 hours for them to return.
Now, he just had to wait for them, the people who had inadvertently brought him salvation, to arrive and seal his fate. He set a booby-trap alarm system using tension wire and empty ration cans around the perimeter, then drew the survival knife he founds in there. He would greet them as a ghost of the jungle, a lethal anomaly that had claimed their base.
Latest Chapter
THE UNSEEN PATH TO ESCAPE
Kealen turned and ran into the forest, his body bleeding freely through the wounds he had sustained in the water and the torn flesh where bullets had riddled him earlier. This time, the injuries did not fade or heal like they had before. Instead, blood soaked his clothes, pooling beneath him in crimson rivulets. Weakness clawed at his limbs, and his breath came in ragged gasps. He hadn’t eaten in days since the soldiers had descended into the forest, their weapons and orders stripping him of the normal life he had once known. Survival had become a grim, daily battle.With sheer willpower, he forced himself forward, collapsing onto the forest floor at the riverbank. His body trembled as he struggled to rise again, but the searing pain and hollow ache of hunger pinned him to the earth. His vision blurred as he let his head loll back, the rustling canopy overhead casting fractured light over his face.Closing his eyes, he surrendered to the dark. For a moment, his wife’s voice echoed i
BEYOND THE EGDE OF SANITY
The soldiers fired their rifles, the sharp cracks echoing through the dense trees as they tried to hit the wolf. But it was too fast, too strong. It moved like a shadow with fangs, lunging at Garcia again and again. Its tusks, twisted and yellowed, tore into his face with brutal force. Blood sprayed across the leaves, and Garcia screamed, a raw, guttural sound that cut through the silence of the forest.Zain stepped forward, his rifle steady in his hands. He aimed carefully, ignoring the chaos around him. He fired once. The heavy bullet struck the beast square in the side. The wolf let out a loud, pained yelp and collapsed to the ground, its body twitching, it's legs kicking weakly at the dirt.For a moment, the soldiers breathed_deep, shaky breaths. Relief washed over them. But it didn’t last.Garcia lay on his back, his face a mess of blood and torn flesh. His breath came in short, wet gasps. Zain rushed to him, dropping to his knees. He pressed his hands against the wounds, tryin
ZAIN'S UNFINISHED VENGEANCE
Kealen's eyes snapped open. He lay perfectly still for a moment, his breath catching in his throat, before he instinctively shook his body, like a dog shedding water, then pushed himself into a sitting position on the soft, damp forest floor. The harsh reality of his situation hit him with the force of a physical blow. Frantically, he ran his hands over his chest, his stomach, his limbs, searching for any sign of injury. There was nothing. Not a single wound, not even a scratch marred his skin.The last thing he remembered was Commander Zain pulling the trigger, the sharp crack of three bullets being fired directly into him at their camp. He was certain, absolutely positive, that he had fallen, lifeless. He could recall the cold, metallic taste of blood, the searing pain, and then… nothing. Yet here he was, in the heart of a deep forest, waking from what felt like a nightmare, completely unharmed."This is far from ordinary," Kealen muttered to himself, his voice a hoarse whisper. His
THE NIGHTMARE OF ZAIN HAS JUST BEGAN
Major Kealen fell backward, his eyes still wide open, his breath catching as he battled for his life. Commander Zain laughed like a devil before firing another bullet into his chest. The mighty Kealen drew his last breath on earth."Take his body deep into the forest, where the wild animals will feast on him," he commanded three of his men. The others concentrated on building their camp.Both the miners and the guides were happy. At least they wouldn't face any more trouble until they were done with the business that brought them into the Alpha_09 forest. Commander Zain, especially, couldn't hide his happiness. At last, nature had brought his supposed enemy to his doorstep, and he had delivered justice.The only challenges they would face now were the dangerous creatures living in the forest. But that was minor for them; their weapons would handle it.A few hours passed, and the sun began to go down. Commander Zain and his men hadn't seen the three soldiers he sent to dump Kealen's bod
BEYOND BEAST OR MAN
As he reached the damp, shadowed spot where he had gunned down a soldier just hours earlier, he was met with a sight that stole the air from his lungs. Instead of the lifeless body, or even the possibility that the soldier's colleagues had retrieved it, something far more sinister awaited him. Only a bloodless, skeletal skull lay on the dark earth. Just hours ago, he had watched the man fall; now, only this macabre relic remained. He reached out with a trembling hand, tracing the clean, unmarred bone. A cold dread, unlike anything he'd ever known, seized him. For the first time in an age, true, primal fear took root in his heart.This wasn't the work of wild animals. There were no gnawed bones, no scattered flesh, no torn uniform scraps. If a beast had devoured him, there would have been an acrid scent of blood, a gory trail leading into the dense undergrowth. But what lay before him was pristine, chillingly clean. Only a freshly picked skull, stripped bare with impossible efficiency.
THE RETURN OF THE TIGER
The moment Kealen realized the sound of pursuit had faded into the vast, indifferent silence of the rainforest, he stopped. He didn't just slow down; he staggered to a halt, leaning heavily against the trunk of an ancient oak, the adrenaline that had fueled his flight now quickly abandoning him.The immediate problem wasn't the enemies he had narrowly escaped, but the searing pain anchoring him to the spot. Blood pulsed quickly from the two gunshot wounds in his left hand, dripping scarlet onto the emerald moss below. The loss of blood was profound, and a cold tide of weakness was washing over him, threatening to pull him under. He knew he had minutes, maybe less, before the shock overwhelmed him.Survival demanded immediate surgery. Gritting his teeth, Kealen pulled the heavy combat knife that was attached to the gun. He found a broken branch nearby, strong enough to serve as a makeshift tool, and quickly sharpened the end into a crude probe. Using the stick, he began the agonizing p
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