Apocalypse: I Raised the Ultimate Antagonist from Scratch
Chapter 82: The Resurrected Ghost
The two massive military transports finally cleared the treacherous, ice-slick logging trail, their heavy tires transitioning with a series of rhythmic thuds onto the cracked, frost-heaved asphalt of the primary mountain access road.
Inside the cabin of the lead transport, the silence was thick, suffocating, and heavy with anxiety. Han Zheng was aggressively tearing into a pack of high-density military survival rations he had pulled from the depths of the glove compartment.
He chewed methodically, forcing the dry, calorie-dense peanut-butter paste bars into his system in a desperate, systematic bid to jumpstart his completely depleted energy reserves.
The sheer mechanical strain of using his force manipulation to hold Old Wang’s multi-ton truck over the open ravine had left his internal kinetic core completely hollowed out. His hands bore a slight, uncontrollable tremor against his knees—a rare physical testament to the absolute physiological limits he had just breached to save the cargo.
Beside him, Lin Qing kept both hands locked onto the heavy steering wheel, her knuckles white and tense. Her eyes darted continuously between the dark, pine-choked treeline flanking the road and the thermal radar display integrated into the dashboard console.
The cabin heaters hummed softly, circulating perfectly regulated air, but the atmosphere inside was freezing with anticipation. They were only a few kilometers from the heavily armored base gates of the mountain structure, yet every survival instinct told her they were currently navigating the single most dangerous stretch of the entire extraction route.
"How is your energy core responding?" Lin Qing asked quietly, her eyes never leaving the sweeping arcs of the snow-covered asphalt.
"Empty," Han Zheng responded, his voice a low, gravelly rasp as he swallowed the last of the dense ration bar and tossed the foil wrapper aside. "I can feel the baseline kinetic pull trying to rebuild its reserves, but it’s sluggish. If we hit a wall right now, I won’t be able to use my ability for more than a few seconds before blowing out my neural pathways. We just need to clear this ridge and reach the mountain gates."
They rounded a sharp, sweeping bend where the asphalt narrow-channeled against the mountain’s vertical rock face on the left and a steep incline on the right. Suddenly, the truck’s high-end LED headlights cut through the heavy sheets of falling snow, illuminating a nightmare scenario.
Spanning the entire width of the asphalt road was a heavily fortified, makeshift blockade. Three armored off-road vehicles were parked bumper-to-bumper in a jagged zig-zag formation, reinforced by spiked steel caltrops, heavy debris, and coils of razor wire hastily dragged across the path to prevent any attempt at ramming through.
Because Han Zheng’s advanced spatial perception was completely dulled by his profound physical exhaustion, he had sensed the phantom signatures of the ambushers entirely too late. The threat had been perfectly masked by the ambient static of the howling storm, the thick canopy, and his own failing, overstrained senses.
"Brace!" Lin Qing hissed, her eyes widening as she slammed her combat boot onto the heavy brake pedal.
The multi-ton transport groaned in protest, its advanced anti-lock braking system fighting the slick sheet of black ice hiding beneath the fresh powder. The heavy vehicle slid forward with a controlled, terrifying momentum, its massive tires tearing through the snow before finally coming to a dead stop just twenty meters shy of the glittering razor wire. Behind them, Old Wang handled the secondary truck with equal discipline, reacting to Lin Qing’s brake lights and bringing the tail of the convoy to a smooth, parallel halt.
Lin Qing’s hands flew to the gear column, instantly throwing it into reverse. She intended to execute a desperate, high-speed tactical retreat back down the mountain pass, using the sheer mass of the truck to push past any light obstacles. But before her boot could even press the accelerator, the rear-view monitors on the dashboard flared to life with a dozen flashing thermal warnings.
Dozens of armed combatants, draped in camouflage gear and carrying high-caliber rifles, silently emerged from the dense pine tree lines behind the secondary vehicle.
They flooded the asphalt road like ghosts rising from the snow, effectively sealing off the escape route and cutting off the convoy’s retreat. They were thoroughly, flawlessly surrounded in the dead of winter, trapped in a narrow choke point where maneuvering was impossible.
Following strict military protocol for a severely outmatched, high-stakes standoff, Han Zheng placed a firm, grounding hand on Lin Qing’s shoulder, stopping her from executing a reckless maneuver.
"Don’t lower the glass, and don’t get down," Han Zheng commanded, his eyes instantly shifting into a cold, analytical gaze as he scanned the perimeter. "The armor plating on these custom cabins can take sustained small-arms fire for hours. We hold our ground and make them show their cards first. Do not show panic."
For a long, agonizing minute, neither side made a single move. The only sound within the mountain pass was the low, steady, and mechanical rumble of the trucks’ idling diesel engines, casting twin plumes of white exhaust into the freezing air.
Then, two figures detached themselves from the center of the vehicle blockade, stepping directly into the blinding, high-intensity glare of the lead transport’s headlights.
Walking at the forefront of the ambush party was Lin Tao. Lin Qing’s ’cousin’ stood there with a smug, triumphant grin plastered across his face. He looked entirely too comfortable, clearly believing he had finally caught them at a fatal disadvantage.
But as Lin Qing looked closer, she realized Lin Tao wasn’t the one leading this operation. He was walking half a step behind a tall, imposing figure wrapped entirely in a heavy, dark hood and a thermal cloak.
The stranger’s cloak flapped violently in the mountain gale, and his face remained completely obscured by the deep, artificial shadows of his protective gear. He stood with a rigid, flawless posture, exuding a chilling aura of absolute, lethal authority that made even the boisterous, loud-mouthed Lin Tao seem small and insignificant by comparison.
Lin Tao stepped forward into the snow, a look of vindictive pleasure in his eyes as he raised a heavy, battery-powered megaphone to his lips. His voice cut through the howling wind, amplified and distorted into a harsh, metallic rattle by the plastic horn.
"Lin Qing! Han Zheng!" Lin Tao barked, his tone dripping with unearned arrogance. "You’re completely boxed in! There’s no mountain fortress to hide behind this time, and no high-tech tricks are going to save you! Cut the engines right now, step down from the cabins with your hands where my men can see them, and surrender the vehicles! If you cooperate right now and hand over every single shred of that cargo, I’ll talk to my associates here and ensure your lives are spared! Don’t be stupid—you’ve got nowhere left to run, and your fuel won’t last forever!"
Inside the reinforced, armored cabin, Lin Qing didn’t budge an inch. She stared through the glass directly at her cousin, her expression hardening into pure, unadulterated contempt. Neither she nor Han Zheng made a single move to comply with the demands, completely ignoring the megaphone’s echoes as if Lin Tao were nothing more than background noise in the storm.
The absolute defiance of the convoy and the stony silence from the cabins clearly grated on the patience of the true leadership behind the blockade.
The hooded man stood motionless for a few seconds, his hidden gaze watching the silent, unmoving windshield of the lead truck. The quiet confidence radiating from the transport seemed to anger him.
Then, with a sudden, violent motion, he reached out and brutally brushed Lin Tao aside. The force of the shove sent Lin Tao stumbling backward into the snow, his back crashing against the hood of an armored ATV. Lin Tao’s smug smile instantly vanished, replaced by a look of sheer, panicked terror as he quickly shut his mouth and scrambled to regain his footing, not daring to utter a single complaint to his superior.
The stranger took three deliberate, heavy steps forward, crossing the remaining distance until he stood directly in the center of the glaring LED headlights, the white light washing over his form. He reached up with a gloved hand, grabbing the heavy wool lip of his hood, and pulled it back completely, exposing his head to the freezing elements.
The freezing mountain air immediately whipped through his close-cropped, graying hair, illuminating his rugged, severe features. His face was deeply weathered, carved by the harsh, unforgiving realities of the post-apocalyptic world, but the most striking, terrifying feature was a jagged, deeply recessed white scar. It cut directly and vertically through his left eyebrow—a permanent, vicious mark left by a lethal combat blade years ago.
Inside the warm cabin, the remaining color drained from Han Zheng’s face instantly, turning his skin an ashen, ghostly white. The shock that hit his system was far worse than the physical overexertion that had hollowed out his kinetic core minutes prior.
His chest locked, his breath catching painfully in his throat as his eyes widened in complete, unadulterated shock. He stared through the reinforced glass at the scarred face of the man standing in the snow, his entire reality fracturing in a matter of seconds.
His hands gripped the armrest so tightly the leather groaned under the pressure, his knuckles cracking as his voice dropped into a breathless whisper that barely carried across the narrow space of the cabin.
"You..." Han Zheng breathed, his voice vibrating with a tremor Lin Qing had never heard from him before. "You’re supposed to be dead."