Global Mutation: The Hunger System-Chapter 64: The Alpine Graveyard

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Chapter 64: The Alpine Graveyard

The transition from the scorched buffer zone to the true, untamed northern territories was not a gradual shift in topography. It was a brutal, vertical collision of jagged shale and freezing atmospheric pressure.

As the bruised, purple twilight completely surrendered to the pitch-black void of the nocturnal cycle, the endless ocean of melted black ash finally broke against the base of a massive, towering mountain range. The Old World had called them the northern peaks. To the Global System, they were an elevated, high-density mana incubator, entirely untouched by the Coalition’s heavy artillery.

Ren did not break his measured, mechanical stride as the incline drastically sharpened.

His heavy combat boots struck the freezing, jagged grey stone. The heavy, matte-black ballistic canvas of his scavenged military trench coat whipped violently around his armored calves in the howling alpine wind. The air up here was incredibly thin, completely devoid of the putrid, rotting stench of the mutated pine forests or the sharp, toxic sulfur of the napalm strikes. It tasted like raw ozone, pulverized rock, and ancient, absolute zero.

He didn’t feel the biting cold. The massive, roaring biological furnace inside his Level 25 chest regulated his core temperature with flawless efficiency. The heavy, dark tungsten sheen of his Iron Skin and the jagged, overlapping obsidian plates of his Chitin Shell rendered the sub-zero wind entirely irrelevant. He was a two-hundred-and-seventy-pound monolith of localized apex evolution, pushing effortlessly into higher elevations.

Exactly ten feet behind him, Chloe was fighting a desperate, agonizing war of attrition against her own unmutated human biology.

The fourteen pounds of her Level III-A plate carrier felt like an anvil strapped to her exhausted spine. The two heavy military thermal blankets she wore like a crude cloak were freezing stiff, the ambient moisture in the air crystallizing directly onto the thick wool. She kept her head down, her chin tucked tightly to her chest, her gloved hands gripping the sling of her fully loaded FN P90.

Just keep moving your feet, Chloe thought, her mind a numb, repeating loop of primitive survival instinct. If you sit down, you die. If you stop looking at his coat, you die.

She was operating entirely within the suppressed radius of Ren’s Aura of the Apex. He had pulled the heavy, suffocating neurological pressure deep into his fortified bone marrow, allowing her fragile heart to continue beating without seizing. But even with the aura mitigated, the sheer physical reality of following a Level 25 Abyssal Tyrant up a freezing mountain was actively destroying her joints and draining her final caloric reserves.

They climbed for three unbroken hours, pushing exactly four miles deep into a narrow, treacherous high-altitude pass.

The towering, sheer cliffs of jagged dark shale rose hundreds of feet on either side of them, completely blocking out the pale sliver of the crescent moon. The darkness in the pass was absolute.

Ren stopped.

He didn’t issue a verbal command. He simply planted his heavy boots on the uneven stone, his broad shoulders dropping into a completely relaxed, dominant posture. The thick, dark canvas of his coat settled heavily around his frame.

Chloe halted instantly, her knees buckling slightly as she leaned her armored shoulder against the freezing cliff wall. She dragged ragged, shallow breaths of the thin alpine air into her burning lungs, her eyes sweeping the pitch-black pass through the grainy green hue of her night-vision goggles.

"What is it?" Chloe rasped, her voice barely a whisper against the wind.

"Environmental context," Ren stated.

His deep, vibrating voice echoed sharply off the narrow canyon walls. His completely solid, burning violet eyes cut effortlessly through the absolute darkness, utilizing his hyper-mutated Night Vision and Level 25 Perception to analyze the massive, physical obstruction entirely blocking the pass exactly forty yards ahead.

It wasn’t a barricade of rusted vehicles. It wasn’t a rockslide.

It was a ribcage.

Ren walked forward, his heavy boots crunching over the loose shale. Chloe followed, her P90 raised, her heart hammering wildly as the massive, grainy green shape resolved in her optics.

The skeletal remains were colossal. The bleached, frozen bone structure easily spanned the entire forty-foot width of the mountain pass. The individual ribs were thicker than massive oak tree trunks, curving upward into the freezing air like the rusted steel beams of a ruined cathedral. The creature’s spine was deeply embedded in the frozen stone, each vertebra the size of a standard Coalition transport vehicle.

It had been dead for months. The freezing alpine wind had scoured the thick bones completely clean of flesh and marrow, leaving behind a stark, white monument to the sheer scale of the high-altitude ecosystem.

Chloe stared up at the towering ribs, her mouth completely dry. The largest monster she had ever seen was the Abyssal Glutton in the Stadium basement, and that beast would have easily fit inside this creature’s jaw.

"What killed it?" Chloe asked, her hands shaking so violently she could hear the polymer sling rattling against her chest plate. "Did the military hit it with the heavy artillery before they sealed the bunker?"

Ren stepped up to the massive, frozen bone structure. He reached out with his bare, heavily calloused left hand, pressing his dark, tungsten-sheened fingers against the side of a massive rib.

He analyzed the deep, jagged fractures running through the ancient calcium.

"The Citadel’s 155mm Howitzers rely on explosive kinetic fragmentation," Ren calculated flawlessly, his violet eyes tracing the completely localized, blunt-force trauma that had shattered the leviathan’s chest cavity. "Artillery leaves blast scoring. It leaves heavy shrapnel embedded in the surrounding rock. There is no scorched earth here. There is no copper or depleted uranium."

He pulled his hand back from the bone.

"This was a biological strike," Ren concluded, his voice entirely flat, completely devoid of fear or apprehension. "The creature that owned this ribcage was massive, likely exceeding Level 22. But it was entirely pulverized by a localized, blunt-force physical impact from a superior anomaly."

He looked past the towering skeletal archway, staring deep into the winding, pitch-black mountain pass.

The ambient mana in the high-altitude zone was fundamentally different from the frantic, chaotic energy of the mutated timberland. It wasn’t a swarm. It was ancient, incredibly heavy, and deeply oppressive. The localized food chain up here didn’t start with starving, low-tier scavengers. It started with massive, solitary leviathans that utilized raw, unadulterated physical mass to crush their prey.

The ecosystem here operates on a completely different scale, Ren thought, the localized biological furnace in his chest humming with a low, eager vibration. The military didn’t push into the mountains because they knew their heavy armor was functionally obsolete against raw, Level 30 kinetic force. They locked the door and hid.

He turned his solid violet eyes back to Chloe.

She was swaying visibly against the cliff wall, her head drooping, the heavy thermal blankets dragging on the frozen stone. Her unmutated biology had hit a hard, absolute wall. If he forced her to march another mile through the freezing pass, her central nervous system would simply shut down from sheer caloric exhaustion and exposure.

She was a fragile logistical asset, but she was still highly useful for carrying scavenged ammunition and maintaining a baseline human perspective on the surrounding topography. Losing her to the weather was a tactical failure he was not willing to accept.

"We are halting the march," Ren ordered.

He didn’t wait for her to acknowledge. He scanned the sheer cliff face on his right, his glowing eyes isolating a deep, natural fissure carved into the jagged shale exactly ten feet above the pass floor. It was a narrow, shallow overhang, but it offered complete physical cover from the howling alpine wind and a defensible, elevated choke point.

Ren reached down, grabbed the heavy nylon webbing of her plate carrier with his right hand, and effortlessly lifted her entirely off the ground. He vaulted the ten-foot vertical incline from a complete standstill, landing silently on the smooth, frozen stone of the shallow cave.

He set her down.

"Rest," Ren commanded.

Chloe didn’t have the energy to speak. She collapsed instantly onto the hard stone, pulling her knees tightly to her chest and wrapping the heavy military wool entirely over her head. Within seconds, her exhausted breathing leveled out into a deep, heavy, unconscious rhythm.

Ren did not sit down.

His Level 25 biology completely eradicated the human necessity for sleep. His hyper-condensed muscle fibers did not fatigue. His Iron Skin did not feel the freezing stone. He existed in a state of continuous, heavily armored vigilance.

He walked to the absolute edge of the ten-foot overhang.

The heavy, dark canvas of his trench coat hung motionless as the natural rock formation blocked the wind. He rested his massive, calloused hand on the heavily wired hilt of the dormant Crimson vibro-sword secured to his utility belt.

Ren stands perfectly still at the edge of the jagged shale, a towering, monolithic gargoyle of dark armor and tungsten skin, his completely solid, burning violet eyes cutting through the absolute darkness of the alpine graveyard, maintaining an unwavering, apex vigil over the colossal, unseen horrors waiting higher up the mountain.