Weapon System in Zombie Apocalypse-Chapter 275: Next Country

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Chapter 275: Next Country

Day 13 — 08:30 AM, MOA Complex — War Room

The holographic map of the Asia-Pacific region shimmered on the wall, now pulsing with four brilliant green dots: Manila, Jakarta, Bangkok, and Taipei. A fifth red zone—Busan—blazed ominously, the last holdout along the East Asian coastline before the mainland. The war room buzzed with quiet focus, a hum of purpose rather than panic.

Thomas Estaris stood at the center of it all, silent but resolute, eyes fixed on the crimson shade covering South Korea’s southern tip. Around him, Rebecca, Casimiro, and Colonel Sison reviewed intelligence packets and thermal readouts streamed from orbiting recon drones and autonomous surface crawlers skimming the outskirts of the Incheon-Seoul region.

"No confirmed biomass clusters on the Busan approach," Sison reported, gesturing toward a scrolling column of satellite imagery. "But further inland, something... changes. Higher ambient spore density. Air is breathable, but loaded with particulate contamination."

Thomas narrowed his eyes. "Mutation vectors?"

Rebecca answered, tapping through a separate feed. "We don’t know. Not like Jakarta’s central node or Bangkok’s canal-rooted veins. This... is something else. More dispersed. Not centralized. Like scattered embers in ash."

"A new strain?" Thomas asked.

"Maybe," Casimiro said. "Or a decaying one. But here’s the twist—someone’s been moving through those zones. Small groups, too organized to be infected. No lights, no digital signatures. But their movement is regular. Purposeful."

Thomas looked at the map again. "That’s not infected. That’s a shadow state."

Rebecca blinked. "You think there’s a surviving government?"

"Maybe not a government," Thomas said. "But someone’s playing defense. We need to find out who."

He walked to the operations table and laid down a new folder marked "Rainwalker Phase Five: Busan." The room fell silent.

"I want Shadow Team One deployed this time. We’ll use Seoul’s subway lines as ingress. We go in low, fast, and silent. First contact protocol only—no aggression unless provoked. I don’t want to spark a war with people still holding out."

Rebecca crossed her arms. "And if it’s not people?"

"Then we put it down before it grows again," Thomas said.

"Copy that," Sison replied, already paging the flight deck. "Shadow One wheels up in ninety."

Day 13 — 14:10 PM, Aboard the Carrier Verdict Dawn, Korean Strait

The skies over the strait were clear for once. The clouds parted just enough for sunlight to catch the deck of the carrier Verdict Dawn, where Shadow Team One prepped for launch. The unit—elite even among Overwatch’s best—was led by Commander Imani Rho, a stoic woman with a glacial stare and a reputation for precision in both tactics and diplomacy.

She stood quietly as a mechanic finalized the calibration on her exosuit’s gravity anchor module.

"Cityfall loadout?" the tech asked.

"Negative. Go with recon armor. No heavy weapons unless we’re breached."

"Understood."

Shadow One wasn’t a brute-force team. They were infiltration, extraction, and ghost-warfare specialists. If someone was still alive in Busan’s silent shell, these were the ones who’d find them.

Thomas’s voice came through on a private channel in Imani’s helmet.

"You’ll drop near the Busan International Port. Use the northern maglev line to reach central. Tunnels are mostly intact. We’ve found dry passage up to Station 7."

"What about return vector?" Imani asked.

"You’ll have airlift support once contact is confirmed. Until then, keep radio chatter short. Assume you’re being watched."

"Copy that."

With a nod to her team, Imani sealed her helmet.

"Shadow One, saddle up."

Day 13 — 17:25 PM, Busan — Northern District Sub-Level Transit

The tunnel was pitch black, the only light the soft glow from visor HUDs and rail-mounted helmet lamps. Every step of Shadow One echoed softly in the desolate dark, disturbing months of stillness. The air tasted of dust and rusted air—no rot, no spores, no sign of biomass.

"Transit grid’s mostly intact," whispered Echo, the team’s comms and tech specialist. "Still detecting low-voltage power surges. Probably solar-fed backups."

"Movement?" Imani asked.

"None yet."

They passed under signs still bearing Hangul script: Busan Central. Exit to Commerce District. Transfer to Red Line.

Then, a flicker.

"Freeze."

The team halted. A dim red laser line crossed their path for a split second—tripwire sensor.

Imani gestured to Rook, the point scout. With surgical finesse, he approached and disarmed the ancient laser device.

"Analog tech," he whispered. "Power-saving. Whoever set this knew how to make it last."

"And it’s not biomass," Imani replied. "That’s human ingenuity."

Day 13 — 18:30 PM, Busan Central Station — Upper Plaza

The escalator emerged into what had once been a grand shopping plaza. Broken glass crunched underfoot. Yet everything was strangely... intact. No vines. No black sludge. Just dust.

And graffiti.

A single phrase was scrawled in both Korean and English: 𝒇𝒓𝒆𝒆𝙬𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝒎

"WE ARE STILL HERE."

Then, movement. Dozens of red laser dots painted the walls.

"DOWN!" someone shouted—but it wasn’t one of them.

From the upper balconies, armored figures emerged—clad in makeshift urban camo, carrying retrofitted assault rifles, drones hovering beside them. They moved like a militia, not a mob.

Imani raised her hands.

"Overwatch. We’re not here to fight."

A moment of silence. Then a voice barked in Korean: "Identify your commander."

Imani didn’t flinch. "Commander Imani Rho. We’re part of Operation Rainwalker. We’re here to reclaim, not conquer."

Another voice called out, in English this time. Younger. Female.

"Put down your weapons. Step into the open."

Imani nodded to her team. "Do it."

They laid down their rifles and stepped forward.

From the shadows emerged a woman in her thirties—lean, with sharp eyes and a civilian medic’s badge taped to her chest.

"I’m Dr. Choi Hana. Former civil defense lead for South Gyeongsang. We thought... you were gone."

"Most of us were," Imani said. "But we came back."

Dr. Choi looked past her, toward the tunnel behind. "Then maybe the world isn’t over."

Day 14 — 05:40 AM, FOB Dawnshore — Command Tent

Thomas listened as Rebecca read the report.

"Survivor enclave confirmed in Busan. Roughly four hundred civilians, organized around a civil defense shelter. Militia-led governance, power from geothermal tapping and improvised solar arrays. No infection cases. No biomass signs. Zone is clean."

He stared at the map again.

Five green dots.

A line had been drawn across Southeast Asia. A bulwark of reclaimed ground.

"It’s not just a rally point anymore," Rebecca said. "It’s a corridor."

Casimiro added, "And it gets better. Dr. Choi said there’s a working military outpost in Gwangju. If that holds, we’re not just rebuilding—we’re reuniting."

Thomas stood. "Then it’s time to shift our doctrine. From isolation to expansion. From survival to alliance."

Day 14 — 13:00 PM, Busan Central Station — Civil Defense Hall

Hundreds of civilians gathered in the hall as the Overwatch insignia was projected across the wall for the first time. The white phoenix gleamed in the lamplight as Imani and Dr. Choi stepped forward together.

"From this day forward," Imani said, her voice carried by portable speakers, "Busan joins the alliance of reclaimed territories. We do not promise perfection. But we promise unity. We rise together."

A cheer echoed through the cavernous room.

Dr. Choi added, "We waited too long in silence. Let today be the day we speak again."

Overhead, the comms link connected Busan to the MOA Complex.

Thomas’s voice filled the room:

"Welcome to the new world."

Day 14 — 18:00 PM, MOA Complex — Observation Deck

As the sun dipped behind the Manila skyline, Rebecca joined Thomas at the rail.

"Five dots," she said.

"And still too much red."

"But we have momentum now."

Thomas exhaled. "Busan proves something critical: we’re not alone. The fire didn’t kill everyone. It scattered us. Hid us. But now? We’re finding each other again."

"And the mainland?"

He turned to her, eyes steely.

"Okinawa next. Then Shanghai. Then the United States."

Rebecca blinked. "You’re really thinking that far?"

Thomas stared east, where the sea met the sky.

"If we don’t think that far, we’ll die here."

A low rumble echoed from the flight line. The next wave of tiltrotors lifted from the MOA hangars—carrying more than soldiers this time. They carried supplies. Medicines. Engineers. Seeds.

They carried civilization.

Day 15 — 07:00 AM, Global Feed Broadcast Room, MOA Complex

For the first time since the Collapse, a global broadcast was re-established.

The world—what was left of it—watched as Thomas stood before a camera.

"My name is Thomas Estaris, Commander of Overwatch. And this message is not one of warning. It is one of renewal."

He glanced at the monitor.

"Across Asia, we are rising. Manila. Jakarta. Bangkok. Taipei. Busan. Five cities. Five flames. And we will not stop."

He leaned forward, gaze fierce.

"We will find you. Wherever you are. However long it takes. We will reclaim this Earth. Not for power. Not for glory. But because we must. Because to live without hope... is to die standing still."

He paused.

"From the ashes, we rise. From silence, we speak. This is our world. And we’re taking it back."

The phoenix behind him blazed.

And the Chapter ended not with an explosion.

But with a spark.

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