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Zombie Domination-Chapter 332- Threat

Chapter 332

Chapter 332: Chapter 332- Threat
The air above the Aethel trench became a screaming, light-bleached hellscape. The Arbiter’s command transport, hovering like a dispassionate god, suddenly found its divinity challenged. Lashing tendrils of blue-and-black matter, now grown thick as ancient trees and crackling with stolen energy, snaked upward.
They didn’t just attack; they interfaced. One whip-like appendage slapped against the transport’s shimmering hull, and instead of bouncing off, it stuck, a black vein of null-energy pulsing as it began to drain the vessel’s advanced systems.
A low, pained hum vibrated from the ship. "The anomaly is targeting our primary systems! It’s adapting to our frequency!" a synthesized voice, laced with uncharacteristic alarm, crackled from the Arbiter’s open channel, now public in the chaos.
On the ground, the promised "cooperative action" shattered into three pockets of desperate, isolated survival. Magnus Ironblood’s roar of fury was swallowed by the grinding screech of his lead vehicle being dismantled.
A massive tendril had punched through the reinforced cockpit, not with brute force, but with a corrosive embrace that dissolved armor and flesh alike. "Fall back! Form a perimeter! Kinetic weapons only, you fools!" he bellowed, but his orders were chaos.
A Tech-Savant anti-grav sled, attempting a flanking maneuver, was swatted from the air. It didn’t explode; it unraveled in mid-air, its component parts streaming like metallic tears into the waiting mass below.
Dr. Aris Thorne watched from her command sled, her face illuminated by the frantic data-scroll on her screens. "It’s not just absorbing... it’s learning! Pattern recognition at a quantum level! My God... it’s beautiful," she whispered, a scientist’s awe battling with visceral terror.
Then a chunk of crystallized debris, fired from the core like shrapnel, slammed into her sled’s deflector, overloading it in a shower of sparks. "Beautiful and fatal! All units, disrupt its cohesion! Find a harmonic weakness!"
But finding weakness was a luxury Seth’s Free Folk didn’t have. They were insects scurrying at the feet of a titan. Using no energy weapons, they were less appealing targets, but the entity was indiscriminate.
A sweeping tendril, harvesting the wreckage of an Ironblood cannon, plowed through their position. Maya screamed a warning, shoving Seth behind a crumbling wall as the tendril passed, its mere proximity causing their scavenged gear to spark and die. "It’s killing the very air, Seth!" she gasped, clutching a dead scanner.
Old Man Harris lay still nearby, buried under rubble, his pouch of shrapnel untouched and useless. "We can’t fight this! We can’t even run from it!" Seth’s scavenger mind, always calculating odds, finally hit zero. "Forget the Arbiter’s prize! Forget the Core! This thing is the land now, and it’s hungry! Disengage! Total scatter! Meet at the eastern sewers if you can!"
The Arbiter’s voice, strained and metallic, boomed across the battlefield, a final attempt at control. "All factions! Concentrate fire on the central pulsation node! There is a millisecond cycle! Synchronize your—" The command was cut short as the main body of the anomaly bulged, and a concentrated beam of stolen energy—a grotesque amalgam of Ironblood ballistic data, Tech-Savant focus beams, and the Arbiter’s own silvery power lanced upward. It struck the command transport not with an explosion, but with a silent, voracious siphon.
The ship’ lights flickered, died, and it began to list, its gravity systems failing as it was literally drunk dry.
From their vantage point, Julian’s team watched the hierarchy of power dissolve into pure panic. They saw Magnus, isolated from his men, using a torn-off vehicle door as a shield against acidic spatter, his face a mask of furious, bewildered defeat.
They saw Dr. Thorne, her data-slate dark, finally ordering a full, scrambling retreat, her eyes not on the enemy but on the mesmerizing, horrific data of her own forces being consumed.
They saw the Free Folk simply evaporate into the ruins, survival instinct overriding all else. And they saw the Arbiter’s shining vessel crash unceremoniously into a ruin half a mile away, its authority broken by a force that rendered all politics, all technology, and all brute strength into mere fertilizer.
The battlefield fell into a relative, eerie quiet, broken only by the grinding growth of the anomaly and the moans of the dying. It had stopped actively hunting. It was... digesting. Incorporating the new metal, energy, and circuitry into its ever-expanding, pulsating form. It had won.
The harvest was complete.
Veronica broke the silence among them, her usual arrogance replaced by hollow awe. "It... farmed them."
"Exactly," Julian said, his gaze fixed on the monstrous, blooming entity. "And now it’s sated. For the moment. The question is... what does it do after it finishes digesting its meal?" He finally turned to his team, his eyes calculating in the reflected blue-black light.
"It’s time we introduced a variable this farmer didn’t plant."
The Aethel Anomaly, a grotesque hill of fused crystal, flesh, and scavenged technology, loomed over the trench, its light throbbing in a slow, sated rhythm. Tendrils retracted, curling around its bulk like the roots of a poisonous plant settling after a feast. It was consolidating. Digesting.
Julian observed this with the detached focus of a pathologist. "Look at its reaction time," he murmured, more to himself than to his team. "During the assault, it was reflexive, aggressive. Now, it’s deliberate. Metabolic. It’s processing the Ironblood’s ballistics, the Tech-Savants’ focused energy, the Arbiters’ gravity tech. It’s integrating them."
"It’s vulnerable," Celestia stated, following his logic. "A creature or a mechanism after a large meal is slower. Its attention is inward, on assimilation, not outward defense."
"Vulnerable to what?" Emma asked, flexing her fingers. Tiny flames danced, but her usual eagerness was tempered by the scene below. "Everything they threw at it just made it stronger. My fire would be a snack."
"Precisely," Julian said, a cold, sharp smile touching his lips. "That is its fundamental logic. It is a perfect counter to a technologically advanced, energy-dependent civilization. It is designed to harvest them. So we do not fight it with what it expects. We fight it with what it ignores."
His eyes swept over his team, assessing them not as fighters, but as a set of unconventional, organic tools. "It consumes directed energy and complex machinery. So, we use neither. Zoe."
Zoe’s head tilted, her beast-like instincts focusing on him fully.
"You operate on primal instinct, enhanced senses, and physicality. Your power is biological, not technological. You are beneath its notice. You will be our scout. Get close. Tell me what you smell, what you feel. Not what scans say."
Zoe gave a short, sharp nod.
"Celestia. Your Silverthreads are metaphysical constructs, not energy beams. They manipulate space and matter at a subtle, almost conceptual level. If it tries to absorb them, it will be trying to drink a shadow. You will test its physical cohesion. Find a seam."
"Understood," Celestia replied, her mind already analyzing angles of approach.
"Clarissa. Your telekinesis is psionic, a force of will applied to base matter. Lift rubble, hunk of broken pavement. Simple, kinetic, but guided by a mind it cannot sense or drain. You are our artillery, with ammunition it cannot eat."
Clarissa took a deep breath, her gentle face hardening with resolve. "I can do that."
"Fey. Beatrix. Your skills are alchemical and material. You think in composition, in reactions. This thing is a fusion of stolen elements. Find the dissonance in its alloy. Is there a weakness in the bond between the native crystal and the absorbed steel? Between the energy and the flesh?"
Beatrix pushed her glasses up, a flicker of her old analytical fire returning. "A forced amalgamation like that... there will be stress points. Inefficiencies."
Fey sighed, the sound more focused than weary. "Gotta play chemist with a nightmare mountain. Fine. Let’s see what it’s really made of."
"Veronica, Emma, Aya—you are the distraction, but a subtle one. Veronica, you will enchant the mundane. Take chunks of rock and make them harder, sharper, but do not make them glow with energy. Keep the enchantment internal, mundane-plus. Emma, you will not create fire. You will superheat the air around the rocks Clarissa throws, using convection, not pure pyrokinesis. Aya, your Eagle Eye. You call the flaws. You see what we cannot."
The team nodded, falling into their roles with a seamless, practiced efficiency.
"Julian," Dori spoke up softly, her large eyes wide but steady. "My Conceal... it hides presence, not from machines, but from perception. Do you think...?"
"It might confuse whatever passes for its senses," Julian finished. "Yes. Shroud Zoe completely as she advances. Then, extend it over our position. We are not here. We are a null point in its awareness."
He looked back at the anomaly, its rhythmic pulsing like a sleeping dragon’s heart. "It farmed them for their greed and their technology. It expects more of the same. It does not expect us. We move now, while it is still savoring its meal."
As Dori’s power settled over them like a cool mist, making their very existence seem to blur at the edges, the team moved forward.

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