©NovelBuddy
Global Mutation: The Hunger System-Chapter 28: The Gilded Cage
The heavy iron grating of the maintenance hatch slammed backward against the concrete, the deafening metallic crash shattering the fragile quiet of the freezing morning.
Ren hauled his upper body over the lip of the vertical shaft, his muscles bunching as he dragged the three titanium filtration cores up from the abyss. Each cylinder weighed exactly seventy-four pounds, machined from aerospace-grade titanium and currently slick with the dark blue, viscous blood of the Benthic Weaver. They clanked violently against the scavenged tactical webbing strapped across his chest. The transition from the drowned subterranean tunnels to the surface hit him with a punishing wave of contrasting sensory data. The stagnant, ozone-heavy air of the Red Line gave way to the sharp, biting chill of February frost, the acrid sting of woodsmoke from a hundred trash-can fires, and the pervasive, cloying stench of unwashed bodies and raw sewage packed into the outer slums.
He stood up entirely, his boots planting firmly on the cracked asphalt. His Chitin Shell passive smoothly retracted beneath his soaked, shredded grey hoodie, the hardened grey armor melting back into pale human skin. The freezing water cascaded off his muscular frame in heavy sheets, pooling darkly on the ground.
Chloe scrambled up the rusted iron ladder a second later. She collapsed onto her hands and knees beside the open hatch, her teeth chattering so violently that the sound carried clearly over the ambient murmur of the waking refugee camp. Her wet denim jeans clung tightly to her thighs, the fabric stiffening in the frigid air, and her knuckles were stark white as she gripped the cold polymer frame of her Glock 19.
"Keep moving," Ren instructed, his voice dropping to a low, localized vibration meant only for her ears. "The cold won’t kill you. The people staring at the titanium will."
The wind is slicing right through my wet clothes, Chloe thought, forcing her frozen joints to unlock as she pushed herself up from the wet asphalt. If Ren decides I’m dead weight right now, I won’t last ten minutes in this mud. Please let the tags work.
The thirty-yard stretch of ruined pavement separating the maintenance hatch from the plywood bounty board felt like a forced march through an open graveyard. As they navigated the narrow, muddy path, the hollow-eyed refugees began to stir beneath their blue tarps and makeshift tents. Starving men and women tracked Ren’s deliberate movements, their sunken gazes locking instantly onto the pristine, silver cylinders strapped to his chest.
In Camp Alpha, pure metal was worth more than human life. The titanium alone could buy a month of rations. Desperation warred heavily with the primal terror radiating from Ren’s Intimidation passive. The psychological aura pushed outward, keeping the miserable mob exactly ten feet back, projecting an invisible wall of sheer predatory threat. Ren didn’t look at them. He kept his violet eyes fixed straight ahead, his posture completely devoid of the shivering weakness that afflicted everyone else in Sector Four.
The grizzled quartermaster remained seated behind his fold-out steel table, nursing a chipped ceramic mug of instant coffee. The halogen spill of the perimeter floodlights cut harsh shadows across his scarred face. When Ren stepped into the blinding beam, the older man froze mid-sip. A dollop of scalding brown liquid sloshed over the rim of the mug, burning his calloused knuckles, but his jaw remained locked.
I’ve manned this desk for eight months and never seen anything crawl out of the Red Line alive, the quartermaster thought, the blood draining rapidly from his weathered cheeks. Don’t look at his eyes. Just give him the tags and pray he doesn’t realize how weak we actually are.
"The Red Line," Ren stated flatly. He reached up, unclipped the heavy tactical webbing, and let the three titanium cores drop directly onto the steel table.
The immense weight dented the thin metal surface instantly, rattling the quartermaster’s cracked clipboard and sending a spare box of 9mm ammunition sliding toward the edge. The older man stared at the cylinders, his jaw finally slackening. He noted the dark, oily stains of Benthic Weaver blood soaked into Ren’s collar, the absolute stillness of his broad shoulders, and the terrifying lack of pupil dilation in his glowing violet eyes.
"Fourteen men," the quartermaster whispered, his voice catching heavily on the rough edge of a smoker’s cough. He didn’t reach for his sidearm. He kept his hands flat on the table, palms down. "Two heavy engineering squads went down there. And you cleared it."
"I want the Black Tags," Ren said, entirely ignoring the man’s shock. The Gluttony skill thrummed deep in his chest, a dark furnace burning through the calories of the monster cores he had consumed underwater. He was impatient. "And the armory access."
The quartermaster swallowed hard, his Adam’s apple bobbing sharply against his scarred throat. He didn’t ask for a debrief. He didn’t ask for the exact biology of the monsters that had slaughtered his soldiers. He simply reached beneath the dented steel table and unlocked a heavy biometric lockbox with a trembling thumbprint. He pulled out two small, rectangular cards forged from matte black polymer, each embedded with a thick silver RFID chip.
"Inner Stadium, Gate A," the quartermaster muttered, sliding the tags across the table. He leaned backward in his folding chair, physically distancing himself from Ren by a full three feet. "Don’t lose them. They don’t issue replacements. You drop that tag in the mud, you stay in the mud."
Ren snatched the tags. The polymer felt cold and unnaturally smooth against his fingertips, entirely devoid of the grime that coated everything else in Sector Four. He turned and handed one to Chloe. She gripped the small black rectangle like a physical lifeline, her shaking fingers instantly smudging the matte finish.
They turned their backs on the bounty board, walking directly toward the monolithic concrete walls of the Stadium.
The primary entrance, Gate A, loomed against the pale morning sky as a fortress within a fortress. Twenty-foot-tall blast doors forged from interlocking reinforced steel plates blocked the massive archway, anchored deep into the Stadium’s original foundation. Flanking the doors were two elevated concrete pillboxes, the heavy barrels of twin-linked .50 caliber machine guns tracking their approach with lethal, mechanical precision.
A squad of six Coalition guards stood at the base of the doors, their M4 assault rifles resting against their chests at the low ready position. They wore pristine, tailored black fatigues, high-impact tactical helmets, and polished boots that contrasted sharply with the mud-stained, piecemeal armor of the outer perimeter patrols.
"Halt," the lead guard barked, raising a gloved hand. He stepped forward, planting his boots wide. He stood a full head taller than Ren, his posture radiating the unearned arrogance of a man who spent the apocalypse hiding behind three feet of concrete.
More trench-rats trying to beg for scraps, the lead guard thought, his lip curling into a sneer of pure disgust beneath his ballistic visor. I’m going to enjoy putting a boot to his ribs and sending him back to the—wait, are those Class-A chips?
Ren didn’t slow his pace. He closed the exact distance, stopping four feet from the guard’s armored chest, maintaining unbroken, dominant eye contact. He raised his left hand, pinching the Black Tag between his index and middle fingers, holding it up to the harsh glare of the security lights.
The guard’s sneer vanished instantly, replaced by a rigid mask of confusion. He snatched a heavy biometric scanner from his tactical belt and swiped the red laser over the silver RFID chip. A sharp, melodic chime echoed from the device, the indicator light flashing a brilliant emerald green. He scanned Chloe’s tag next, receiving the identical digital confirmation.
"Class-A Citizenship confirmed," the guard stated, his tone shifting immediately from hostile superiority to rigidly professional military protocol. He stepped aside, moving smoothly out of Ren’s path, and tapped a twelve-digit code into the heavy keypad bolted to the concrete wall. "Welcome to the Inner Ring."
The massive steel blast doors groaned. Hydraulic pistons hissed loudly, bleeding pressurized air as the immense metal plates parted just wide enough to allow two people through.
Ren stepped across the threshold, Chloe trailing closely in his wake. As the heavy doors sealed shut behind them with a definitive, echoing thud, cutting off the noise and the stench of the refugee camp entirely, the atmosphere shifted with jarring violence.
The Inner Stadium was a completely different reality.
The sweeping, multi-level concourses of the pre-apocalypse sports arena had been transformed into a pristine, heavily fortified subterranean city. The shattered asphalt and freezing mud of Sector Four were entirely replaced by polished white marble tiles, their surfaces reflecting the warm, steady glow of thousands of recessed LED strips lining the vaulted ceilings.
The climate-controlled air was entirely devoid of toxic ash. Instead, the enclosed space carried the rich, intoxicating aromas of roasted coffee beans, sizzling cured meat from the mess halls, and the sharp, clean burn of powerful chemical antiseptic.
Meticulously organized supply depots lined the outer walls, stacked high with wooden crates of ammunition and medical supplies. Clean, uninjured personnel guarded white canvas medical tents. Off-duty soldiers sat at long aluminum tables, laughing openly over hot meals served on ceramic plates. Men and women in tailored suits—the remnants of the Old World’s political and corporate elite—walked the upper balconies, leaning against the glass railings with crystal glasses filled with amber liquid in their hands.
Chloe gasped, her hands flying to her mouth to stifle the sound. The sheer, unapologetic contrast between the starving, freezing masses thirty feet outside the wall and the absolute luxury within the concourse was staggering.
"They have electricity," Chloe whispered, her voice echoing slightly in the vast, tiled corridor, tears of sheer disbelief welling in her eyes. "They have everything. We were freezing outside while they drank coffee."
"Because power requires a baseline," Ren answered, his voice dropping to a low, frigid murmur. His Far Sight mapped the layout of the concourse instantly, piercing through the crowds to note the locations of the heavy armory doors, the officer’s private quarters, and the primary power conduits running along the ceiling. "If everyone has warmth and food, the elite lose their leverage. The camp outside exists strictly to make the people inside feel powerful."
They built a concrete vault to protect their soft bodies, Ren thought, a dark, terrible smile finally pulling at the corners of his mouth. They are completely oblivious to the fact that they just locked themselves inside with the apex predator. This entire armory belongs to me now.
Ren adjusts the heavy straps of the scavenged webbing across his shoulders and steps forward into the brilliant, artificial light, his dark boots leaving wet tracks across the pristine marble as he navigates the sweeping corridor directly toward the central armory.







