Apocalypse: I Raised the Ultimate Antagonist from Scratch
Chapter 70: The mirror of the past
Lin Qing hurried down the stairwell toward the lower control deck, her boots clicking in a sharp, rapid rhythm against the steel grates.
The urgent news delivered by Dr. Zhou buzzed in her mind, forcing her into a state of intense, calculated focus. The red emergency strobe lights from the previous night had finally been shut off, replaced once again by the hum of the facility’s pristine, white fluorescent lighting, but the sterile atmosphere did nothing to calm the sudden prickle of alarm at the base of her neck.
As she descended, her mind frantically drifted away from the immediate layout of the bunker. Who could possibly be at the gate claiming to be her relative? As a transmigrator who had taken over this physical vessel, she was acutely aware that she was a cosmic ghost inhabiting a stolen life. She didn’t have a single drop of genuine blood relation in this entire world. Whoever was standing at the threshold of this fortress was a walking landmine—a piece of the original host’s history that could easily rip her carefully constructed identity to shreds.
Entering the main security hub, she bypassed the heavy airlocks. In this unforgiving, apocalyptic wasteland, rushing out to greet a sobbing relative without visual confirmation was the easiest way to walk into a concealed trap. Trust was a luxury that had died the moment the virus broke out.
Instead, Lin Qing marched straight up to the master security desk and slapped the digital interface with the palm of her hand. The console beeped responsively, bringing up the real-time, close-circuit camera feeds of the lower outer checkpoint gate on the master monitor. She needed to see exactly who this ghost was before she made her next move.
The high-definition screen flickered, stabilization lines smoothing out to reveal the bleak landscape outside. Standing just beyond the gate, shivering violently against the biting morning wind, was a man.
He was wrapped in a surprisingly decent, thick winter coat, though the fabric was caked in layers of dried mud and grime. Crouching in the frozen shadows behind him were three dirty, exhausted stragglers, clutching makeshift melee weapons—rusted pipes and wooden clubs—looking thoroughly spent, hollow-eyed, and broken by the cold.
The security camera automatically zoomed in on the leading man’s face as he paced back and forth across the slushy snow, his chest heaving as he twisted his features into a familiar, deeply impatient scowl.
The moment Lin Qing’s eyes locked onto his face through the monitor, her breath caught slightly. She paused, slowing her heart rate to a complete halt as she deliberately forced her consciousness to dive deep into the inherited memory fragments of the original host. She needed to place him, to dig through the messy, suppressed archives of a dead girl’s mind to find the matching puzzle piece.
The process was jarring, like flipping through a dusty, water-damaged photo album belonging to a complete stranger. But within seconds, her mental search struck a nerve. A sudden, deep-seated echo of phantom anxiety, resentment, and a strange, suffocating helplessness flared up from the cellular memory of the former Lin Qing. The emotional baseline of the body reacted violently before her logical mind could even process the data.
Then, a name crystallized with absolute clarity in her mind: Lin Tao.
He was the original host’s older cousin. Through the unspooling thread of the old memories, Lin Qing saw a loud, arrogant, and deeply narcissistic parasite. Lin Tao had spent the better part of two decades relentlessly bullying, manipulating, and emotionally bleeding the former Lin Qing, simply because she had been a soft, timid, and submissive person who never fought back.
He had viewed her as an easy target, a convenient stepping stone to make himself feel powerful, frequently demanding her allowance, forcing her to take the blame for his mistakes, and treating her like an inferior servant within the extended family dynamic.
Lin Qing’s eyes narrowed into a cold, predatory slit as she pulled her gaze back to the digital monitor, her hardened soul completely suppressing the residual panic of the host’s body.
This was an incredibly dangerous wild card to deal with. Because the original host had only been married to the Commander, Han Zheng, for a brief, whirlwind six months before the viral downpour hit, Han Zheng only knew her family members by name and distant reputation. He had never spent extended periods of time with them.
Everyone had simply presumed that her family had perished in the chaotic, bloody first week of the outbreak, so they weren’t overly suspicious of a survivor showing up; miracles and unexpected reunions happened in the wasteland all the time.
Deflecting Han Zheng and the soldiers would be relatively easy with a simple, fabricated excuse about family estrangement. But Lin Tao had known the old, timid Lin Qing for over twenty years. If he was allowed entry into the facility, if he spent even a single hour around her, her absolute lack of fear, her razor-sharp military posture, and her hardened, lethal demeanor would inevitably raise massive red flags.
A childhood bully, driven by a desire to dominate, would notice the structural shift in her personality faster than anyone else. He would realize almost instantly that the girl he used to terrorize had been replaced by someone—or something—entirely different.
"I’ll handle this," Lin Qing said over her shoulder to Lieutenant Chen, who stood quietly at the secondary console a few feet away, his hand resting casually near his holstered sidearm. Her voice was calm, grounded, and entirely stripped of any familial warmth.
Lieutenant Chen glanced at her, sensing the sudden drop in temperature within the room, but he merely nodded and stepped back, giving her the space to manage what he assumed was a difficult personal reunion.
Lin Qing reached out, her fingers pressing down firmly on the master comms switch. The line connected with a sharp, echoing static hiss that cut through the freezing air outside the gate.
"State your identity and purpose," Lin Qing’s voice cut through the outer speaker box. It didn’t carry a single shred of emotion. It was a flat, icy, and completely mechanical tone that sounded more like an automated defense system than a human being greeting a long-lost relative.
Down on the monitor, Lin Tao jolted violently at the sudden sound of the audio line cracking open. He blinked against the falling flurries of snow, turning his head toward the speaker.
When his brain finally recognized the underlying cadence and pitch of the voice, his eyes instantly lit up—not with tearful relief, gratitude, or brotherly affection, but with a sudden, smug look of absolute triumph. He stepped closer to the intercom box, leaning his grime-streaked face right into the microphone, his posture instantly shifting back into his trademark, overbearing arrogance.
"Lin Qing! It really is you!" Lin Tao barked into the microphone, his tone immediately adopting a demanding, aggressive edge that assumed total authority. "I knew it! Someone in the lower refugee camp said a massive military convoy entered this mountain, and I knew your soldier husband had to be the one running the show. Hurry up, stop wasting time and open this damn gate! It’s freezing out here, and your older brother needs hot food, a clean shower, and a warm bed immediately!"
He paused, casting a brief, dismissive glance back at his shivering companions before looking back up at the blinking red lens of the security camera, giving it a lazy wave of his hand. "Also, tell your men to bring up a few of those heavy supply crates I saw in the back of your trucks. My people have been starving in the woods for three days. Chop chop, Lin Qing. Let us in through the gate. Don’t make me wait."
He was operating entirely on their old, broken dynamic. He fully expected the timid, submissive girl of his past to gasp in fear, apologize profusely for the delay, and tearfully open the fortress doors, handing over everything she had just to appease his anger and gain his validation. He had no concept of the reality of the world they now lived in.
Lin Qing stood perfectly still in front of the glowing monitoring console, her dark eyes locking onto his digital reflection with a dead, unblinking calm.
The deep-seated, phantom anxiety from the host’s memories didn’t affect her baseline pulse for a single second. She didn’t raise her voice, nor did she let any trace of anger or personal hatred slip through the audio line. She simply let a thick, suffocating silence hang over the comms for five agonizing seconds, letting the cold wind outside punish him.
When she finally spoke, her voice dropped well below freezing, carrying the weight of a heavy iron door shutting down.
"This is a restricted, high-security research facility currently operating under strict martial lockdown," Lin Qing stated, each word cutting through the static like a shard of broken glass. "No unauthorized civilians are permitted entry under any circumstances, regardless of prior association. Turn around, clear the checkpoint, and leave the mountain immediately."
Down on the camera feed, Lin Tao froze mid-stride. His jaw dropped slightly, his face instantly flushing a dark, angry purple as the absolute shock of her blunt rejection hit him like a physical slap. In front of the three desperate stragglers he was leading, her flat refusal was a massive, humiliating blow to his fragile, narcissistic ego. He had promised his followers that his cousin would roll out the red carpet, and instead, he was being locked out in the cold.
He slammed his fist violently against the reinforced metal casing of the intercom box, dropping his fake brotherly act entirely as he leaned in and snarled into the receiver, his voice cracking with rage.
"What the hell did you just say to me? You ungrateful little bitch! Have you lost your damn mind? Did you forget who fed you and looked after you when your parents were too busy working their jobs? You think just because you married a man with a uniform you can talk to your own family like this? Open this godgoddamn door right now, or I swear to God, when I get in there, I’ll personally show you what happens to people who forget their place!"
"If you strike that console again, or if you refuse to clear the area within the next thirty seconds," Lin Qing interrupted, her voice remaining eerily calm, smooth, and entirely unbothered by his screaming, "I will officially categorize you and your companions as hostile raiders attempting to sabotage and breach a secure federal bunker."
Lin Tao’s breath hitched, his entire body locking up in the slushy snow as he stared blankly at the dark lens of the camera. The sheer coldness of her interruption cut through his rage, sending a sudden spike of primal fear through his chest.
"The automated defensive turrets mounted on the upper side are currently locked onto your coordinates," Lin Qing lied smoothly, her tone carrying a chilling certainty that made it entirely impossible to doubt the threat. "If you remain within the red zone when the internal countdown reaches zero, the system will automatically authorize the guards to open fire. You have exactly twenty seconds left to clear my sight."
Lieutenant Chen, standing at the console beside her, didn’t say a single word, but his chest swelled slightly as he adjusted his posture, the subtle, heavy authority of his uniform and his hand resting on his weapon adding an invisible, terrifying pressure to her words.
Down at the gate, Lin Tao stumbled backward, his boots slipping in the frozen mud. His jaw remained wide open, a look of absolute, profound terror washing over his features as he stared at the camera.
He didn’t just hear a different vocabulary coming from his cousin—he felt an invisible, heavy, and terrifyingly lethal aura radiating through the cold speaker box that made his blood run completely cold. The submissive, easily terrified girl he used to kick around for fun was entirely gone; the woman on the other side of the wall sounded like a seasoned, heartless executioner who wouldn’t hesitate to paint the snow with his blood.
Without another word, Lin Tao frantically turned on his heel, grabbing the sleeve of one of his stunned stragglers and dragging them along as he scrambled away from the iron cage. He fled down the icy mountain path as fast as his legs could carry him, terrified that the sky would rain fire if he lingered for another second.
Lin Qing watched the monitor calmly, her eyes fixed on their retreating forms until they completely disappeared into the distant tree line. She reached out, her fingers smoothly clicking the master comms switch off, cutting the static and plunging the security hub back into a peaceful silence. Her cover remained perfectly intact, and a lingering nuisance from the past had been effectively destroyed without firing a single bullet.
Turning away from the console, she met Lieutenant Chen’s gaze, her expression completely unbothered. "Let’s get back to the inventory logs. We have work to do."