Primordial Awakening: I Breathe Skill Points!-Chapter 80: The Awakening

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Chapter 80: The Awakening

"What do you mean not all dead?" Tank’s voice had gone very quiet, the kind of quiet that came before violence or panic or both simultaneously.

Zeph kept his eyes fixed on the sitting corpse, watching for another telltale movement, another shift that would confirm what his enhanced perception was screaming at him. "The one against the wall. The skeleton. It moved."

"Corpses don’t move," Kael said, but his voice lacked conviction, like he was trying to convince himself more than anyone else. "They’re dead. Dead things don’t move. That’s literally what defines being dead."

"In normal places, sure," Whisper said, and they’d gone very still in that way that predators did when they’d spotted prey—or when prey had spotted them. "But we’re not in a normal place. We’re in ruins that breathe and have veins full of blood that transforms people into crystalline monsters. Why would we assume the corpses follow normal rules?"

"Because I really, really need them to follow normal rules right now," Kael said, his voice climbing toward hysteria. "I need at least one thing in this nightmare to behave in a predictable, non-horrifying way."

"Well, you’re going to be disappointed," Zeph said, because the corpse had definitely moved again. The skull had rotated perhaps ten degrees, hollow eye sockets now aimed directly at their group. "Because it just turned its head to look at us."

Everyone froze. Five sets of eyes locked onto the sitting skeleton, watching for movement that would confirm or deny Zeph’s observation. The glow crystals cast harsh shadows that made it difficult to distinguish between actual movement and optical illusion created by flickering light.

For a long moment, nothing happened. The skeleton remained motionless against the wall, just another corpse in a passage full of corpses, no more threatening than any other piece of preserved death.

"I don’t see any—" Seris started to say.

The skeleton’s jaw dropped open with a dry clicking sound.

Then it screamed.

Not with lungs—it had no lungs, no vocal cords, nothing that should produce sound. But it screamed anyway, a high-pitched keening that seemed to come from the bones themselves, from the hollow cavities inside the skull, from the empty spaces where life had once existed. The sound was wrong on a fundamental level, was the auditory equivalent of the alien script that hurt to read, was noise that human ears rejected but couldn’t block out.

"RUN!" Tank bellowed, and for once everyone agreed with him immediately and without argument.

They ran.

The passage ahead remained mercifully clear of corpses for perhaps fifteen meters, giving them room to sprint down the steep incline with the glow crystals bouncing wildly and creating strobing shadows. Behind them, the screaming skeleton was answered by other sounds—wet tearing noises, brittle cracking, the sound of dead flesh remembering how to move.

Zeph risked a glance backward and immediately regretted it.

The corpses were waking up.

Not smoothly. Not gracefully. With the jerky, uncoordinated movements of puppets controlled by amateur puppeteers, or bodies reanimated by something that didn’t quite understand how living things were supposed to move. The skeleton was pulling itself upright with movements that violated physics and anatomy, bones grinding together in ways that should have made locomotion impossible. The fresher corpses were worse—flesh tearing as muscles contracted that had been still for weeks or months, joints bending backward, fingers extending like claws.

"Don’t look back!" Tank shouted from somewhere ahead. "Just run! Run and don’t stop!"

"Wasn’t planning on it!" Kael yelled back, his voice high and thin with terror.

They passed the last visible corpse—one of the fresher ones, positioned face-down on the slope. As they ran past it, the body twitched. Fingers scraped against stone. The head began to lift, neck cracking with sounds like breaking wood.

"They’re all waking up!" Seris screamed. "Every single one! The whole passage is full of them!"

The steep downward slope that had made walking uncomfortable now made running actively dangerous. They had to lean back to avoid pitching forward, had to fight gravity that wanted to accelerate them beyond their ability to control, had to navigate in bouncing light that made depth perception nearly impossible. One wrong step, one stumble, and they’d go down hard on organic metal that would crack skulls as easily as Tank had crushed that ribcage.

Behind them, the sounds of pursuit grew louder. Not footsteps—the corpses didn’t walk normally. They scraped and dragged and pulled themselves forward with single-minded determination, moving faster than dead things should be able to move, closing distance despite the steep slope that should have made climbing difficult.

The screaming skeleton’s wail was joined by other sounds—moaning from corpses with intact throats, clicking from the ones that were mostly bone, wet squelching from the ones with enough preserved tissue to make disgusting noises as they moved. The sounds echoed in the confined passage, bouncing off walls and creating auditory chaos that made it impossible to judge how close the pursuit actually was.

"How fast are they?" Tank shouted back to Zeph, who was rear guard and had the best view of their pursuers.

"Fast enough!" Zeph called back, which was not the reassuring answer anyone wanted but was the honest one. The corpses were moving at a pace somewhere between a fast walk and a slow run, using the downward slope to their advantage, not caring if they fell because they were already dead and had nothing left to damage.

"This is insane!" Kael was gasping now, struggling with the thin air that made breathing difficult even standing still, let alone sprinting down a steep incline while being chased by the reanimated dead. "This is completely insane! Corpses don’t chase people! That’s not how death works!"

"Tell them that!" Seris shot back, her own breathing labored.

The passage seemed endless, stretching ahead into darkness that the glow crystals couldn’t fully penetrate. How far down did the Shadow Path go? How long could they maintain this pace before someone’s endurance gave out and they had to stop and fight? And how did you fight enemies that were already dead, that had nothing left to lose, that felt no pain and knew no fear?

And there was something else—the egg in his storage ring had changed its rhythm again. It was pulsing faster now, perhaps 65 or 70 BPM, excited or agitated or feeding on the fear and chaos. Zeph could feel it, could sense it responding to the proximity of death and violence.

"There!" Whisper called from the front, their voice cutting through the panicked breathing and pursuing sounds. "Opening ahead! Wider chamber maybe!"

Hope surged. A chamber meant room to maneuver, meant potential escape routes, meant they weren’t trapped in this corpse-filled corridor with the dead closing in from behind.

They ran harder, pushing through burning muscles and oxygen-starved lungs, driven by the primal terror of being chased by things that shouldn’t be able to chase anything.

The passage did open ahead—not into a full chamber but into a wider section, perhaps six or seven meters across instead of three. The slope leveled out slightly, making running easier but also robbing them of the downhill advantage.

They burst into the wider section, the glow crystals revealing walls that curved outward, creating more space that felt like salvation after the claustrophobic tunnel. No corpses were visible here—just smooth organic metal and that ever-present warmth and the breathing that never stopped.

"Keep going!" Tank ordered. "Don’t slow down! We need distance!"

They ran through the wider section, boots pounding on metal that rang with hollow sounds, echoing in ways the narrow passage hadn’t. Behind them, the pursuing sounds grew momentarily fainter, the corpses apparently having more difficulty with the wider space or perhaps being slowed by the leveling slope.

"Are we losing them?" Kael gasped out between breaths.

"Don’t jinx it!" Seris snapped back.

The wider section continued for perhaps thirty meters before narrowing again into another passage, this one angling to the left and continuing downward at that same steep grade. They took the turn without slowing, momentum carrying them around the corner.

And that’s when Zeph’s enhanced perception caught it—a subtle difference in the floor ahead. A section that sat slightly lower than the surrounding metal, a depression so subtle it would be invisible to normal vision, especially while running at full speed with bouncing light creating chaos for depth perception.

"PRESSURE PLATE!" Zeph shouted, but he was at the rear and his warning came a fraction of a second too late.

Tank’s leading boot came down on the depressed section.

Click.

The sound was mechanical, precise, final. The sound of a trap activating, of consequences being triggered, of five people who’d been so focused on the horror behind them that they’d forgotten to watch for dangers ahead.

Tank’s eyes went wide as he felt the plate depress under his weight, as his momentum carried him forward past the point of no return, as he realized what he’d just done.

"Oh," Tank said, his voice suddenly very calm in the way that people got calm when they knew something terrible was about to happen and there was no longer any point in panicking about it. "We’ve activated something."​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​