Apocalypse: I Raised the Ultimate Antagonist from Scratch
Chapter 69: The knock at the gate
Lin Qing’s finger hovered over the trigger of her rifle, her eyes scanning the green, grainy monochromatic topography of the mountain ridge through her night-vision goggles. But the shadowy silhouette was already gone, swallowed entirely by the dense swirl of ash-heavy smoke and the blinding white-out of the howling blizzard.
She slowed her breathing to a complete halt, listening intently over the roaring wind, but her brain immediately calculated the risk. Pursuing the stranger into the dark was a fool’s errand.
The observer clearly knew the jagged, treacherous layout of this limestone mountain like the back of their hand, while she was completely new to the regional geography. Chasing them in a white-out blizzard would only expose her to a blind ambush.
Lin Qing stepped backward, returning to the safety of the facility’s drainage corridor. She hauled the heavy, circular iron maintenance plug shut, throwing her weight into the massive hydraulic crank until the heavy steel deadbolts clicked definitively and airtight into the rock face. The bunker was sealed once more.
"Hatch is secured," Lin Qing reported into the comms, pulling her mask down around her neck as she rejoined the squad in the lower laboratory hallway.
She immediately caught Han Zheng’s eye, pulling him slightly away from the rest of the group. "I spotted someone lurking on the ridge just as we were pulling back. They were hiding in the higher rocks, completely silent, watching us execute the ambush."
Han Zheng’s brow furrowed, his expression instantly tightening into a dangerous mask. Without a word, he marched straight toward the primary security hub. Lin Qing followed closely at his flank, her heavy combat boots clicking softly against the concrete floor.
Inside the booth, Dr. Chen Wei and Dr. Morse were still trembling, their chests heaving as the facility’s automated environmental console began to chime with green, stabilized data lines. The air was clearing, fresh mountain oxygen once again circulating through the biomes.
"Pull up the external footage for the western slope over the last twenty minutes," Han Zheng commanded, his voice slamming into the room with the force of a physical blow.
Dr. Chen Wei flinched, his thin fingers frantically tapping at the master terminal interface to bring up the recordings. The screen flickered, displaying the grainy, night-vision perimeter lines of the limestone hill. Han Zheng and Lin Qing leaned over the console, their eyes scanning every frame of the recording as the playback sped through the timeline of the ambush.
Nothing. The screen showed only the dense sheets of falling snow and the chaotic, violent eradication of the twelve raiders by the soldiers.
"They’re incredibly cunning," Lin Qing murmured, her dark eyes narrowing as she studied the rocky topography surrounding the main concrete facade. "They weren’t anywhere near the electric fences or the entrance line. They were positioned on a distant, elevated rocky ledge that falls perfectly within a structural blind spot where your perimeter cameras can’t reach."
Han Zheng folded his arms over his heavy tactical vest, his jaw clenching as he stared at the green screen. "If they know the camera blind spots that perfectly, they’ve been tracking this facility for a long time. Lin Qing, do we hunt them down?"
They stood in the dim light of the security booth, rapidly analyzing their options. The twelve desperate raiders they had just slaughtered on the ridge were the ones the scientists had complained about—the starving mob that had grown impatient and tried to smoke them out. But this silent observer was a different story.
"No," Lin Qing decided, her voice grounded and logical. "The squad is running on fumes. We haven’t had a single hour of true, uninterrupted rest since we broke through the barricades and survived the zombified animal stampede. The raiders’ main attempt has been crushed, the intake vents are breathing, and they can’t breach the electrified outer walls from the outside anyway. As long as whoever is out there isn’t an immediate, active threat to the main gate, we postpone the hunt. We need to rest."
Han Zheng gave a single, tight nod of agreement. He turned his cold gaze onto the pale faces of the three scientists. "The threat is neutralized. The air is clean. Do not touch the master security console while we are gone."
Leaving the whimperings of Dr. Chen Wei and Dr. Morse behind in the dark laboratory, Han Zheng and Lin Qing led the exhausted soldiers back up the central concrete stairwell, retreating into the secure sanctuary of the upper residential wing.
The moment the heavy steel door of their private suite hissed shut and the automated locks engaged, the stifling weight of the apocalypse seemed to lift once more. The soldiers dropped their heavy gear in the outer storage room, heading into their respective quarters with deep, hollow groans of pure physical relief.
But as the adrenaline of the battlefield faded from the air, a different kind of tension instantly filled the quiet room.
The heavy, suffocating silence returned to the kitchen area. Han Zheng walked over to the counter, unbuckling his tactical plate carrier and setting it down with a heavy metallic thud.
He didn’t continue his intense, burning interrogation from before. He didn’t ask her how a housewife knew how to clear a military ridge or split a raider’s throat with a combat knife. Seeing the dark circles under her eyes and the damp hair clinging to her neck, his gaze softened.
"Get some sleep," he said, his voice dropping into a low, quiet register. "We’ll handle the rest tomorrow."
Lin Qing nodded stiffly, but as she looked toward the hallway, a deeply awkward, heavy atmosphere settled over her shoulders.
They were legally and structurally husband and wife. There was only one master bedroom allocated for the senior administrators—which meant, by all accounts of domestic normalcy, they were supposed to share a room and a bed.
For a hardened, cynical transmigrator who viewed intimacy as a vulnerability, the prospect of sharing a bed with a hyper-observant, intensely masculine Commander was entirely unacceptable. Her mind scrambled frantically for a retreat.
"I’ll... I should go monitor Su Xiao," Lin Qing said, her voice unusually stiff as she grabbed her fluffy pillow and a thick fleece blanket from the living area sofa. She forced a neutral mask onto her face. "Her fever just broke, and her genetic awakening is still volatile. I need to stay close to her through the night to ensure her vitals don’t fluctuate again."
Without waiting for his response, she practically bolted down the short, dimly lit hallway, carrying her bedding like a shield as she fled towards the bedroom allocated for the children.
The door to the children’s room was slightly ajar. As Lin Qing slid into the room, she found Han Ye and Gu An standing near the edge of the small nightstand. They had both gotten up quietly to manually unlock the suite’s primary security door for the soldiers earlier, and they hadn’t yet gone back to sleep.
Lin Qing closed the door behind her with a soft click, letting out a long, ragged breath she hadn’t realized she was holding. She threw her blanket over a spare cot near the window.
Standing in the dim light, Han Ye watched his mother’s sudden, frantic entrance. His dark eyes glanced from the pillow clutched tightly in her arms to the closed door, and a sudden, rare flash of pure amusement flickered across his tiny features.
The fierce, terrifyingly lethal woman who had just ruthlessly slaughtered raiders in a freezing blizzard was currently scrambling to escape his father’s bedroom. He didn’t say a single word, but the corner of his mouth twitched before he quietly climbed back into his own bed.
Gu An simply adjusted her blanket and lay down beside a deeply sleeping Su Xiao.
Despite the internal awkwardness, that night inside the unbreachable concrete fortress was the most comfortable sleep any of them had experienced since the viral downpour began. Insulated from the freezing wilderness, protected by military-grade deadbolts, and entirely out of reach of the horrors of the wasteland, the squad slept in absolute, blissful peace until dawn.
The next morning broke with the quiet, cold light of winter filtering dimly through the secure upper ventilation shafts of the residential suite. The air inside was warm and clean. The soldiers were already awake, sitting in the common area, quietly drinking water and checking the magazines of their sidearms, preparing for the day’s inventory logistics.
Knock. Knock. Knock.
A sharp, distinct, and rhythmic series of knocks suddenly echoed against the heavy outer steel door of the suite.
The soldiers instantly froze. Lieutenant Chen moved with immediate, practiced caution, stepping toward the frame and checking the optical peep-lens before cracking the heavy door open just a few inches, his hand resting firmly on the grip of his holstered pistol.
Standing in the stark fluorescent light of the outer corridor was Dr. Zhou. She looked visibly anxious, her hands tucked deep into the pockets of her white lab coat, her weight shifting nervously from side to side as she glanced past the lieutenant’s shoulder.
"Is Captain Lin inside?" Dr. Zhou asked, her voice laced with a deep sense of hesitation and confusion.
Lin Qing stepped forward from the kitchen area, her damp hair tied back, her expression perfectly neutral as she approached the threshold. "I’m here, Dr. Zhou. What’s the issue? Is there a problem with the filtration grid?"
Dr. Zhou looked directly at Lin Qing, her brow furrowing deeply as she delivered a piece of completely impossible, reality-shattering news.
"No, the vents are perfectly fine," Dr. Zhou said, her voice dropping into a tense, breathless whisper that carried clearly into the quiet room. "Someone... someone has just arrived at the gate of the facility and they are claiming to be your blood relative. They’re demanding to see you immediately."
Lin Qing froze dead in her tracks, her heart instantly dropping into a freezing void as the words echoed in her ears.
As a transmigrator who had taken over this body, she didn’t actually have a single real relative in this world—which meant whoever was standing outside that gate was either a ghost from the original Lin Qing’s past, a deadly trap designed by the forces outside, or a shadow that was about to rip her entire cover to pieces.