Chapter 6
Author: Raven woods
last update2025-12-01 06:10:51

Serena Blackwood’s POV

The ascent was a nightmare of groaning metal and panicked scrambling.

When I finally hauled myself onto the narrow decking of the maintenance bridge, my heart rate was still a measured, steady drum, a mechanical rhythm refusing to acknowledge the horror I’d just witnessed.

I didn't look down. I couldn't afford the memory of the two bodies hitting the ground. They were casualties of poor tactical decisions, nothing more. My poor decision.

Kane Malric was curled in a trembling heap near the shattered railing, clutching his briefcase and some files like it contained his soul.

“They… they took him,” he whispered, rocking slightly. “They dragged him down li…like he was nothing.”

“He was nothing,” I said coldly, checking my rifle. “Dead weight dies first.”

Kane flinched, but I didn’t soften it. He needed sharp truths, not comfort.

Below us, the infected shrieked and scraped against the metal supports, their movements jerky and insectile. One leapt, slamming into a pillar with enough force to rattle the entire bridge.

“Sergeant…” Kane’s voice shook. “We can’t stay up here.”

He was right.

This bridge wasn’t stable it was a countdown.

“On your feet,” I barked.

Kane staggered up. His knees almost buckled but fear glued him together.

We moved quickly, crossing the ruined platform until we reached a collapsed section that sloped down toward the industrial district.

The city below was a graveyard of red shadows. Buildings eaten by darkness. Streets littered with overturned cars. Fires cracked through the blood colored gloom.

Hours of eclipse. No sun. No dawn. Just… red.

“We head for shelter,” I said. “There. Warehouses.”

Kane squinted through the haze. “W…We’re going down there?”

“You see a better option?”

He didn’t.

We descended the slanted metal, boots scraping. Every step made the bridge groan like it was begging to collapse and take us with it.

Once we hit the ground, I grabbed Kane by the sleeve.

“Don’t stop,” I growled, yanking him forward.

We darted between wrecked cars, past shattered shop fronts, until we reached the closest warehouse a massive, rusted box with its sliding door cracked open.

Perfect.

I pushed Kane inside, then slipped in after him and dragged the metal door shut, jamming a pipe through the handles.

Darkness swallowed us.

Not silence.

Never silence.

Dripping water.

Echoes of distant screams.

My rifle swept the interior shelves collapsed, machinery rusted, crates stacked like forgotten tombstones. Thin strips of red light seeped through the boards, painting everything in that hellish glow.

“Clear left,” I ordered.

Kane crouched instead, shaking hard. “I don’t have a weapon!”

“Use your brain. It’s bigger than your courage.”

He shot me a wounded glare but stayed quiet. Good.

I combed the warehouse corners, rafters, and shadows. No movement. No chittering. No breathing besides our own.

The place was abandoned.

For now.

“It’s clear,” I said at last. “Take a beat.”

Kane sagged against a crate, sliding down until he hit the floor.

“I can’t… can’t believe we’re alive.”

“You’re alive because I dragged you here,” I said flatly, setting my rifle beside me. “Don’t get romantic about it.”

His laugh came out cracked and humorless.

“What now?”

I checked the windows again.

“Survival camp. Twelve miles north.”

He blinked like I’d slapped him.

“Twelve miles? Out there?”

“Unless you want to wait here until the infected sweep buildings,” I said dryly. “They do sweeps. They learn.”

Kane swallowed hard and hugged his briefcase tighter.

A long moment hung between us, heavy, tense, punctuated by a distant scream that echoed through the rafters.

Then quietly, almost to himself Kane asked:

“Sergeant… why us? Why did we live when the others didn’t?”

I leaned back against a cold metal beam.

Because Morales’ scream still echoed in my skull.

Because Diaz’s plea Don’t let me turn still scraped at my ribs.

Because I could still feel Jenkins’ teeth snapping inches from my throat.

I didn’t answer.

Instead, I closed my eyes for two seconds only two and forced my breathing into a soldier’s rhythm.

“Get some rest,” I said. “We move when the world gets quieter.”

Kane laughed weakly.

“There is no quieter.”

I stared into the pulsing red cracks of light bleeding through the wall.

“No,” I agreed.

“But we move anyway.”

Kane curled into himself.

I kept my rifle ready and my back to the door.

And the night the endless red night dragged on.

The abandoned warehouse groaned in the wind, every rusted beam shaking like the whole structure wanted to collapse around us.

That sickening red glow of the eclipse bled through the broken windows, turning the air thick and metallic, like we were breathing inside a furnace.

Kane sat on the cold floor hugging his briefcase to his chest, rocking like a scared child.

“They..they dragged him down,” he whispered, voice cracking. “Those… things. They aren’t human.”

“No,” I said, scanning the shadows. “It wasn’t.”

I didn’t bother sugarcoating anything. He needed clarity, not comfort.

Kane wiped his face with trembling hands.

“Why did the eclipse stay?” he whispered. “It should’ve ended. It should’ve ended hours ago.”

“It didn’t,” I replied calmly, “so we adapt.”

A metal rattle echoed somewhere deep in the building.

Kane jumped so violently his briefcase slipped from his grip. “What was that?”

“Not friendly,” I said, stepping forward.

The warehouse was open, but the corners were drowned in darkness. The kind of darkness that felt… swollen. Alive. Something was inside.

Kane clenched his fists. “ are we safe?”

“No,” I said honestly. “But we can be quiet.”

I pulled him gently but firmly behind an overturned shelf.

“Listen,” I whispered.

The sound came again a dragging shuffle, slow but heavy, like something walking on broken joints. My body went cold.

Kane’s breathing became shallow. “ Tell me that’s not another one of”

“It is,” I cut in softly. “Stay low.”

A silhouette staggered into the thin beam of red light leaking from the window.

My stomach clenched.

Its spine was bent in three places, twisted like wet rope. The skin on its arms was torn, dangling in long strips. Its jaw hung open, unhinged, slanted too far to the left as if someone had ripped it loose and just let it dangle. Black veins crawled under its translucent skin like worms, pulsing to the rhythm of something deep and wrong.

Kane covered his mouth to stop a scream.

The creature lifted its head slowly, sniffing the air.

Hunting for us.

Behind me, Kane whispered, “We can’t go to the survival camp. We won’t make it, we…”

“We will,” I said sharply. “But not now. Not while this thing is inside with us.”

The creature dragged its hand along the wall, claws screeching against the metal. It was listening for movement.

Then its head snapped toward our direction.

Kane froze.

I froze.

The creature let out a low, wet gurgle.

“Kane,” I whispered, staring into its hollow eyes. “When it turns away… you run north”

He nodded, tears streaming silently down his face.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app

Latest Chapter

  • Chapter 16

    Serena’s POVThe road bent north, thinning into cracked concrete bordered by dead fields and rusted signposts. We’d been walking for hours, too tired to talk, too tense to relax.The nests were behind us, but the weight of them walked right beside us.Asher limped a little. Elara watched every shadow. Kane kept glancing over his shoulder like he expected something to follow.Nia held onto Elara’s sleeve, quiet as ever.I kept my rifle ready.The eclipse-light didn’t fade. It never did. But the deeper we went, the darker it felt as if the sky itself was warning us to turn around.We didn’t.We couldn’t.About an hour later, Kane slowed.“Wait, look there,” he said, pointing through the broken fence line.Behind a cluster of collapsed trees and vines, a shape stuck out large, rectangular, metallic. Not a vehicle… a structure.A building.Concrete walls. Reinforced windows. A faded blue sign tilted sideways.Elara squinted. “What is that?”We stepped closer until the letters came into v

  • Chapter 15

    Serena’s POV***********The Next “Morning************“As soon as we’re outside, stay close,” I told them, tightening the strap of my rifle. My voice came out steady , it had to. “We follow the highway north. No detours unless I say so.”Kane opened his mouth like he wanted to give direction, but one sharp look shut him up.He adjusted his glasses instead, muttering something about observation protocols.Asher leaned against the cart for balance, still pale under the red light. “I’m fine,” he murmured when Elara fussed over him.“No, you’re not,” I said, stepping beside him, “but you can walk, and that’s all we need right now.”He nodded once.We pushed the carts out of the ruined supermarket and onto the cracked street. The moment we stepped outside, the world hit us silent, abandoned, coated in that sick eclipse-red glow that made every broken building look like it was bleeding.We followed the cracked highway out of town. About an hour into the walk, I noticed something.A low

  • Chapter 14

    Dr. Kane Malric’s POVAsher hit the ground so hard the entire aisle shuddered.For a second, none of us moved.None of us breathed.Serena’s gun hung uselessly at her side now, her arms shaking too much to aim even if she wanted to.Elara just stared at his collapsed body, hands trembling.Nia whimpered into my shirt, hiding her face.And me…I stared at him like he was the final page of a book I had spent my whole life trying and failing to write.Immune.Transforming.But not turning.Asher’s body lay crumpled against the cracked tiles, chest rising and falling in uneven, shallow breaths. The red-black shadows of the ruined supermarket still flickered through the broken windows, and the smell of burnt blood and sweat clung to everything.I swallowed hard. Years of lab experience didn’t prepare me for this not the Eclipseborn, not the Eclipse, and certainly not someone like Asher. He was… an anomaly. A walking, breathing unknown variable, a puzzle I had no frame of reference for.El

  • Chapter 13

    Asher’s pov The wall behind me vibrated with every breath I took.I wasn’t sure if it was the building shaking or just my bones grinding against themselves, desperate to finish shifting—or to tear themselves apart trying.The worst part?I couldn’t tell which outcome I wanted.My hands dug into the tiles, cracking them. The air was thick with blood, dust, and that burning red light that felt like it was crawling inside my skull.I squeezed my eyes shut.Hold it. Hold it. Don’t lose them. Don’t lose yourself.But the monster inside me was pacing. Thrashing. Tasting the fear in the air like it was fuel.“Asher,” Elara whispered.Her voice was too soft. Too close.“Don’t,” I growled no, snarled. “Elara… stay back. Please.”My throat felt stretched. Wrong. Like two voices were fighting to speak through the same mouth.Serena still had the gun trained on me, knuckles white around the grip.Kane tried to whisper something to calm her, but he sounded like he was trying to calm himself more

  • Chapter 12

    Asher’s povDarkness squeezed around me like a fist.Not peaceful darkness.Not sleep.This was heavy. Suffocating. Burning.Like something was coiled inside my chest with red-hot wire, wrapping around my ribs, crushing, tightening. My veins felt like they were sizzling under my skin, boiling from the inside out.Am I turning?Is this it? Is this what it feels like right before you become one of them?A strangled breath tore out of me, raw and animal, as awareness slammed back into my body like a punch to the ribs.I gasped, choked, then shot upright so fast pain ricocheted through my spine.The world hit me in broken fragments.Red eclipse light pouring through the shattered supermarket windows.Shelves knocked over.Debris everywhere.Serena shouting something, her voice sharp, panicked.Kane swinging a metal pipe like he barely knew how to hold it.Nia crying somewhere behind the crates high, terrified little sobs.And thenThree Eclipseborn.Not the normal ones.No.These things

  • Chapter 11

    Elara’s pov The supermarket was too quiet.Nia slept huddled against a threadbare blanket I’d spread across the floor between two empty shelves. Her small chest rose and fell slowly, oblivious to the chaos outside. For a moment, I let myself believe the red eclipse couldn’t touch her here, couldn’t reach this fragile pocket of safety.Then it came, the screaming.Faint at first, ragged and jagged, like metal being torn apart. My stomach tightened. My hand gripped the knife so hard it ached. Nia stirred, murmuring in her sleep. I leaned down, brushing her hair from her face.“Shh… it’s okay, Nia . I’m right here,” I whispered.The screams grew sharper, closer, as though something, someone was running for their life. Then a single gunshot rang out, followed by another piercing scream.My blood ran cold. The door rattled violently. Someone was trying to get in.“Nia ! Behind the crates, now!” I hissed, yanking her into the shadows behind a stack of empty boxes. Her small hands

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App