Apocalypse: I Raised the Ultimate Antagonist from Scratch
Chapter 75: The Dead Zone Manifest
The muffled, heavy treads of the armored trucks rolled off the frozen expanse of the bridge, descending into the low-lying basin of the electronic wholesale district.
The air here felt heavier, thicker with frost, trapping the bitter chill between towering, monolithic commercial warehouses. It was a haunting graveyard of the old world. Dead digital billboards hung like shattered obsidian mirrors over rows of delivery vans, buried so deeply in the snow they looked like white graves.
Thanks to the freshly applied thermal paste, the convoy moved like a pair of silent specters through the labyrinth of ice.
Lin Qing leaned forward against the dashboard of the lead truck, her breath fogging the glass. "There," she gestured toward a darkened, cavernous opening ahead. "The underground loading dock of that commercial office block. Pull in. We need to break line of sight from the ridges entirely."
Han Zheng, who was now driving, cut the headlights, letting the truck’s momentum carry them into the pitch-black, concrete underbelly of the building. The sheer, claustrophobic chill of the garage hit them the moment the engines sputtered into silence.
Before anyone could unship their gear, the driver side door clicked open. Han Zheng slipped outside, his expression tight.
He called a quiet huddle in the loading bay, beckoning everyone closer.
"We have a problem," Han Zheng said, his voice dropping to a low, gravelly frequency. "My senses picked them up again as we cleared the bridge. The tail on the ridge isn’t losing us. There’s a large contingent—too many to be random scavengers. They’re moving with a disciplined, fixed distance, tracking our tire treads in the fresh snow before the wind can erase them."
Old Wang spat to the side, his face darkening. "Scouts? You think it’s the rogue factions from the outer sectors?"
"No," Han Zheng’s eyes darkened."The coordination is too clean. I suspect it’s Lin Tao’s people. He’s probably been looking for an excuse to map our supply routes or hijack our next haul. If they pin our exact extraction point, they’ll call in their main force and bottle us up inside these warehouses while we’re loaded down with heavy cargo."
Lin Qing looked at him, her gaze sharp. "If it’s Lin Tao, he won’t hesitate to play dirty. What’s the play?"
"A counter-tracking loop," Han Zheng said decisively. "I’m taking three soldiers. We’re backtracking on foot through the blizzard, using our own footprints as bait to encircle and silently neutralize the tail before they realize we’ve split." He turned his gaze to the two men beside him. "Xiao Li, Old Wang. You two stay with Lin Qing. Keep a tight perimeter, scout the immediate area, and wait for my signal."
"Understood," Xiao Li nodded, adjusting his heavy tactical shield. Old Wang racked the bolt of his rifle with a grim nod.
With a final, lingering look at Lin Qing, Han Zheng melted back into the shadows of the concrete garage, the Vanguard squad vanishing into the howling whiteout outside like ghosts.
"Alright," Lin Qing said, turning to her crew. "We don’t waste time. Han Zheng is buying us a window, but we still don’t know which of these massive blocks holds the high-grade gear. Let’s hit the main security and reception hub near the district gates. If there’s a master layout, it’ll be there."
Moving in a tight, defensive triangle, the three of them crossed the snowy courtyard on foot. Old Wang kept his rifle raised, scanning the frozen upper windows of the surrounding buildings, while Xiao Li walked a step ahead of Lin Qing, his massive frame ready to absorb any sudden ambush.
They breached the glass doors of the security office, the floor crunching loudly under their boots with shattered safety glass and frozen mud. The office was frozen in time, abandoned in a panic during the initial evacuation. Papers were scattered like dead leaves, and the monitors were dead, grey screens.
Lin Qing didn’t hesitate. She stepped behind the main administrative desk, her gloved hands systematically ripping open rusted filing cabinets and tearing through desk drawers.
"Anything?" Old Wang muttered, keeping his back to her as he watched the entryway.
"Hold on..." Lin Qing’s fingers caught the edge of a heavy, leather-bound binder buried beneath a stack of decayed corporate pamphlets. She pulled it out, shaking off a layer of white frost. It was a physical, hard-copy shipping logbook and warehouse manifest, kept by the site’s logistics manager before the grid went dark.
She flipped through the stiff, frozen pages, her eyes scanning the columns of inventory numbers until they locked onto a highlighted military-contracted procurement order.
Her breath caught. "I found it. The industrial-scale solar panels and the heavy-duty photovoltaic arrays aren’t in the general storage units. They’re stored alongside specialized inverter battery vaults—built to withstand extreme weather and theft."
"Great," Old Wang said, a hint of relief in his voice. "Where are they?"
Lin Qing’s blood ran cold as she read the location code printed in bold ink at the top of the manifest page. ’Central Distribution Hub: Building C-4.’
She slowly closed the binder, a heavy, suffocating dread settling over her chest. The manifest pointed directly to the exact warehouse Han Ye had warned her about. The one with the cracked, pressurized chemical gas lines. The one the boy had called a frozen tomb.
She had no choice. The base needed that power to survive. Lin Tao’s scouts were closing in, Han Zheng was out in the blizzard fighting for time, and the prize was locked inside a death trap.
"We move," Lin Qing said, her voice turning to steel. "Building C-4. Follow me."
They sprinted across the snow-choked courtyard, the wind whipping at their jackets until they reached the towering facade of the central hub. High above, a faded, peeling blue logistical logo groaned under the force of the gale.
But the entrance was a nightmare. The massive steel rolling shutter that sealed the loading bay was completely warped, pinned down by a monstrous, thick sheet of black ice that had frozen solid at the base, anchoring the metal directly into the concrete floor.
Old Wang cursed under his breath, stepping up and tapping the ice with the butt of his rifle. It sounded like solid stone. "It’s sealed tight. To clear this much black ice, we’d need to bring up the trucks and use the mechanical saws, or blast it with a thermal torch."
"No," Lin Qing snapped immediately, her hand shooting out to stop him. "No fire. No heavy vibrations. No sparks. The structural integrity inside is completely compromised, and there are active, leaking gas lines frozen into the structure. A single spark or a heavy mechanical shock will detonate this entire block."
Old Wang stared at her, stunned. "Then how the hell do we get in?"
Lin Qing turned her gaze to the silent powerhouse standing beside them. "Xiao Li. Can you lift it without making a sound?"
Xiao Li didn’t say a word. He stepped forward, his expression calm and focused. He unslung his heavy shield, setting it gently against the snow, and stepped directly up to the warped steel shutter.
He closed his eyes for a fraction of a second, inhaling the freezing air.
Clack.
A surreal, grinding sound echoed softly as Xiao Li activated his power. A dull, rock-hard molecular layer of stone armor began to ripple across his skin, coating his hands, wrists, and forearms in a heavy, impenetrable layer of Earth Hardening minerals. His veins bulged beneath the stone-clad skin as his passive, advanced physical strength surged to its absolute peak.
Xiao Li wedged his rock-hard, stone-armored fingers into the narrow, frozen gap beneath the warped shutter. He planted his boots deep into the snow, bent his knees, and threw his massive weight upward.
The muscles in his back strained against his vest. The steel shutter let out an agonizing, muffled groan of tearing metal and fracturing ice. Xiao Li didn’t stop, his teeth gritted as he forced his brute strength against the thousands of pounds of frozen resistance, lifting the heavy steel upward inch by inch, suppressing the noise with pure, controlled force.
With a final, sharp ’crack’ of breaking ice, he forced the shutter open just enough—a mere two feet of clearance from the frozen ground—before holding it perfectly still, his stone-clad arms locking into place like hydraulic pillars.
"Go!" Xiao Li grunted, a bead of sweat freezing instantly on his temple.
Lin Qing dropped to her stomach without hesitation, sliding underneath the jagged, frozen edge of the shutter, with Old Wang fracturing his large frame to slide right in behind her.
Safely on the other side, Lin Qing flipped on her tactical flashlight, sweeping the beam across the darkness of the warehouse interior.
The beam of light cut through the gloom, and Lin Qing’s breath completely hitched.
The interior was a terrifying, beautiful nightmare. A massive section of the reinforced glass skylight had collapsed under the winter’s weight, allowing storms to mix with leaking chemical refrigerants. The result was a spectacular, unstable cavern of glowing, eerie blue ice that choked the entire center of the warehouse floor, its jagged spires reaching up toward the fractured roof.
And beneath the thick, crystalline frost layer of the floor, a faint, unmistakable smell of frozen chemical rot drifted into her nostrils.
They were inside. But as Lin Qing looked at the massive slopes of blue ice burying the entrance to the subterranean vaults, she realized Han Ye’s warning had been an understatement. They were officially standing inside the mouth of a frozen grave.