بيت / Werewolf / The Alpha Protocol / Chapter 2: The Abyss of Omega

مشاركة

Chapter 2: The Abyss of Omega

مؤلف: Azilla
last update تاريخ النشر: 2026-05-21 23:45:22

My skull stabbed in a rusty air hammer.

When I blinked, an unnaturally grelle, sterile white burned into my retina.

The familiar, comforting stench after lubricating oil, earth and sweat from the slums

had disappeared. Instead, the air roared to ozone, sharp

Disinfectants and... fear. Cold, metallic terror.

I lay on a steel carrying, strapped tightly with thick leather straps. Panik rose in

my throat, but I forced myself to rest. Breathe, Jada, analyze. Survival.

How many times did I make a working system from old, broken boards?

My mind was my best tool, and I was not allowed to let the fear

shortcut.

I just turned my head over a millimeter. The room was a high-tech laboratory,

stuffed with flickering monitors and solid steel doors. Two men in

white coats stood a few meters away and stared at a bright

Data terminal. Her faces were bald.

“Your vital values are stable,” the younger whispered. He knew himself with trembling

Hands over the forehead. “But doctor, look at the compatibility rate. The

must be a system error of the raster scanner. An absolute level

Gene tests never before. Not even close.”

The older scientist slowly shook his head. No trace of

Humanity was in his view. “There are no errors in the Omega protocol. The

Oberkommando has already authorized the command. It is the new sedative.”

“But she will die in seconds!” the younger cried. “Just like the last

fourteen women. Subject Zero has been on withdrawal of the Sedativa for three days. His

Metabolism burns everything. He has the last group of heavily armored purifiers in

the air torn when they only tried to clean his food hatch! If we do this

Put a woman in there, he won't just kill her. He will tear them into pieces.”

My blood is freezing. The cold crawled into my fingertips. Subject Zero. That was not

Man. It was a weapon. A genetic nightmare they are down here in the dark

cultivated far away from the shiny domes of the elite. And I was his food.

“We don’t have a choice,” said the doctor emotionally. He turned to me and

noticed that my eyes were open. “The biometric barrier of its cell stops

not long. If we don't give him a sacrificial animal that his instincts for a few

It's busy minutes, it's breaking out. Bring them to the cell.”

Before I was able to resist or scream against the belts, two were hard

armored guards from the shadow to the carrying. They released the straps, grabbed me

mercilessly on the arms and crumbled on my feet. My knees almost gave up,

but I forced myself to keep my weight. I wouldn't give them satisfaction

give me to crawl.

They dragged me through a long, sparsely lit corridor. The deeper we are

the intestines of sector Omega went, the colder it became. The steel floor was

sown with deep, brutal scratches – as if something massive had tried to

To tighten violence in the metal. The scratches were deeper than my thumb was thick.

At the end of the gang there was a door. She didn't look like a normal

cell door, but like the bulkhead of a space cruiser, almost half a meter thick

and secured with heavy hydraulic bolts. Red warning lights turned silent

on the ceiling.

“May the system of our soul be gracious,” one of the guards muttered.

He typed a code into a wall panel. The hydraulics clinked like a dying,

mechanical animal. The massive door slowly glitt to the side and gave the view

to an impenetrable, pitch-black nothing.

From the cell there was a stench that turned my stomach. It was the smell of

old blood, biting ammonia and wild, untamed predator. It was the

Smell of absolute death.

“Get away, slum rat,” the guard crawled and pushed me hard with the

Gunpowder in the back.

I stumbled forward into the dark and fell hard on the ice-cold stone floor of the cell.

My knee was bleeding. Before I could get up, the steel door slammed behind

To me. The loud cliche of the hydraulic bolts sealed my fate.

Absolute, suffocating darkness enveloped me.

I didn't dare breathe. My heart beat my ribs so loud that I

feared the sound would betray me. I pressed flat on the damp

Floor and felt blind on my boot. At the raid they had mine

tool backpack and shocker removed, but in the slums you learned,

always have a backup. From the hollow sole of my left boot I pulled a

narrow, sharpening knife-sharp piece metal that I made of a broken rotor blade

had ground.

It was a bad trump against a monster that could tear armored steel,

but I wouldn't die noisy.

Taken minutes. The silence was so dense that it was on my ears.

I heard it.

A deep, crunchy sound. Chain link which slowly rubs over chain link.

A massive weight moved in the shadow, just a few meters before me. The

Stone floor vibrated slightly under an ear-powdering, well-tural cord, the deep

in a gigantic breast. It didn't sound human. It sounded like a

Urgency that rose from the depths of the earth.

Two eyes opened in the dark.

They floated almost two meters above the ground. They glowed in a toxic,

murderous green and fixed me. The pure, undiluted hatred of this

Look, let me stare inside.

The crawling became louder, more aggressive. The clinks of the chains were compressed to form

whiping noise when the massive shape was in the dark.

The beast came out for a leap.

استمر في قراءة هذا الكتاب مجانا
امسح الكود لتنزيل التطبيق
تعليقات (1)
goodnovel comment avatar
Betty Kyriazi
Bin neugierig wie es weitergeht
عرض جميع التعليقات

أحدث فصل

  • The Alpha Protocol   Chapter 20: The silence after the storm

    The sudden silence was adorable. After the sounding noise of the plasma drills, the ticking of the rifles and the mechanical circles of the Juggernauts felt the rest in the Command center almost ineffective. The green impulse was faded, but he had his guilt done. The whipmaker lay on the flawless ground. Without being cybernetic eye without the humming amplifiers in his suit and without his He was nothing more than an ordinary, broken man. He grabbed trembling after the dead plasma whip, but the handle remained cold. Kael slowly approached him. His heavy boots were crumbling on the shed. The whipmaker crawled back on his back, naked fear of death was written in his face. He expected the beast to tear him into pieces . He waited for the animal blood rush that he himself had for years Torture had provoked. But Kael didn't raise his hand. His green eyes were clear and calm. The murderous heat of the Apex was an ice-cold, human calculus. “You took everything I was from me,

  • The Alpha Protocol   Chapter 19: The alpha signal

    While Kael puts the Cyborgs in a brutal, metal-stripping near combat I ran. Plasma shots hit close to me in the ground, slender the white Steel and drove scouring stench into my lungs. I threw myself behind central, holographic control panel. “Authentication required for alpha protocol”, the AI reported calmly, unimpressed from End of the world around them. “Kael has granted authorization! He did the scan!" I cried the terminal while I was hectic about the red flashing warnings. ‘Secundary confirmation required. Physical input at the main relay necessary.’ A cylindrical, glass console went up from the middle of the table. Darin pulsated a pure, emerald green crystal cage. I raised my head. Kael had literally armored the first Juggernaut helmet torn off, but the second cyborg rammed him with his huge steel arm against one of the hydroponic cylinders. The glass splintered. Kael bleeded, but he laughed – a wild, freed laugh – while he puts his claws in the hydraulics of th

  • The Alpha Protocol   Chapter 18: Dance of the Projectile

    “Fire!” Kael grumbled. The deep grief of the kinetic rifles immediately overtoned the czech of the hostile Plasma weapons. The repulsion drove me a sharp pain into my shoulder, but I thought it was merciless. The plan worked perfectly. The blue energy shields of the rushing hounds flickered up uselessly as our heavy tungsten projectiles met them. My modified cartridges tore the Shields in a bright sparkling rain and slew the exoskeleton behind it effortless. The first wave of attackers literally collapsed in the air, yet before their boots touched the bottom of the bunker. Kael did not fire like a man – he shot with the mathematical, ice-cold Precision of the Apex. Every shot a deadly hit. He moved like a flowing shadows through the rain of the rocks, drew the fire, shielded me and unresolved. “Flanke left!” he called me. Three purifiers pushed through the dust and directed their heavy cannons on my Cover behind one of the control tables. I threw myself on the ground,

  • The Alpha Protocol   Chapter 16: The Alpha Protocol

    Freshly cleaned and in tight-fitting black kinetic suits of the Old World dressed – which we had found in the lockers of the station – we returned to the great Command Center back. The suit spanned over Kaels's massive muscles and made him look more than ever like a war god. The wild, black hair fell it now clean and slightly wavy in the neck. He approached the big holographic table. His hands suffered instinctively over the glass consoles, as if its muscles remember handles that are Forgot. “System report”, he ordered. His voice was calm and authoritarian. “Authorisation accepted”, replied the Mexican AI. The hologram of blue Earth changed. It turned red and yellow, showed the toxic storms and the black plasma scales of the consortium. “The Eden network is at 89 Percentage offline. The atmospheric toxins have exceeded critical levels.” “What was my last command before the contact broke off?” Kael asked quietly, almost hesitant. The hologram zoomed to sector Alpha. An o

  • The Alpha Protocol   Chapter 15: The Shrine

    Bright, pure white light flashed when we entered the huge hall. I had blink and lift protectively the arm. When my eyes got used to the brightness, it got my breath. Before we were the absolute technological miracle. No tight, rusty cages like in sector Omega. No dirty junk mountains as in sector 4. A gigantic, immaculate command center stretched in front of us. In the middle a holographic globe – the earth, unharmed and blue, not of toxic clouds covered. Along the walls glass, liquid-filled Cylinders in which tiny, luminous spores float in a kind of deep sleep seemed. “This is a terraforming bunker,” I realized and slowly went to the cylinders. “The consortium burned the earth, but the old ones have the seed down here for a new world kept.” Kael had stopped. He looked around in the sterile, clean environment. His eyes fell on his own, blood and mud-worn hands, on the recruited Rests of fungal paste and black claws on his fingers. He went back a step, almost as if he w

  • The Alpha Protocol   Chapter 14: The Echo of the Past

    The tunnel swallowed the noise of the Toxic channel with every step we take made deeper into the interior of the earth. It was like we were running through the veins of a sleeping titan. The walls no longer consisted of moist, unhauled rock, but of seamless, matte poly steel, which, even after centuries in the underground, neither rust nor Destroyed. It wasn't a consortium technology. The consortium built klobig, raw and designed for plasma burning. This was elegant. It was meant for eternity. Kael went close to me, his massive body tensioned, the senses on the absolute Maximum sharpened. His bright green eyes penetrated the absolute Difficult while I'm focused on his warmth. He had my hand in his hand and kept them safe. “The air changes,” he suddenly whispered and stopped. I breathed deeply. He was right. The scouring stench after sulfur and destruction faded. Instead, it smelled nothing. After pure, cooler, unfiltered Empty. “An airlock,” I concluded, and my scrap c

فصول أخرى
استكشاف وقراءة روايات جيدة مجانية
الوصول المجاني إلى عدد كبير من الروايات الجيدة على تطبيق GoodNovel. تنزيل الكتب التي تحبها وقراءتها كلما وأينما أردت
اقرأ الكتب مجانا في التطبيق
امسح الكود للقراءة على التطبيق
DMCA.com Protection Status