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Primordial Awakening: I Breathe Skill Points!-Chapter 84: The Silence Zone 2
Zeph saw it first—his enhanced perception caught the motion before the others noticed. Something large, roughly humanoid in shape, moving with deliberate purpose rather than the shambling gait of the reanimated corpses.
He tried to shout a warning. His mouth opened, his throat worked, his lungs pushed air through vocal cords. Nothing. No sound to alert the others, no way to call out danger.
He gestured frantically, trying to get Tank’s attention, trying to warn them that they had company.
Tank saw his gestures, followed his pointing finger, spotted the movement.
The creature emerged into the light.
Not THE creature from the deepest depths. Not the horror that had designed this place. But something lesser, something that had been left behind or created as a defender or failed as an experiment.
Bio-mechanical construct. Vaguely humanoid. Three meters tall. Covered in the glowing blue veins that pulsed with bioluminescent blood. The body was a disturbing hybrid of organic tissue and metallic components—flesh grafted to machine, muscle fused with circuit, biology and technology merged in ways that suggested neither understood the other but were forced to coexist anyway.
The face was the worst part. Almost human. Almost recognizable. But wrong in every detail—too many eyes, arranged in asymmetrical patterns. A mouth that opened vertically instead of horizontally. Skin that looked like it had been stretched over a frame that didn’t quite match human anatomy.
It moved toward them with purpose, with intelligence, with clear intent to engage.
Combat in silence was a uniquely horrifying experience.
Tank charged—Zeph saw him make the decision, saw him shift his weight and accelerate forward, but heard nothing of the footfalls that should have thundered, nothing of the battle cry that his open mouth suggested. Tank’s shield impacted the creature’s torso in what should have been a thunderous collision. No sound. Just visual confirmation of the hit, of the creature staggering backward from the impact.
The construct struck back—a sweeping arm that Tank barely blocked with his shield. The impact that should have rang like a bell, that should have echoed through the chamber, happened in complete silence. Weapon meeting shield with no audible result, creating cognitive dissonance that made the fight feel unreal, like watching a performance with the sound cut out.
Kael and Seris attacked from the flanks—Zeph saw them move, saw spells form and weapons swing, but experienced none of the usual combat sounds. No incantations, no clash of steel on unnatural flesh, no grunts of effort or cries of pain. Just silent violence, battle conducted in a void of sound.
The lack of verbal coordination made their movements chaotic, uncoordinated. They couldn’t call targets, couldn’t warn each other of attacks, couldn’t coordinate strategy through communication. They were reduced to visual cues and instinct, fighting as individuals rather than a team.
Whisper struck from stealth, their rogue skills making them naturally difficult to perceive even in normal conditions. In this silent chamber, they were practically invisible until the moment they attacked—appearing behind the construct, blade finding gaps in its bio-mechanical armor, disappearing back into shadows before it could retaliate. For once, the silence was an advantage rather than a handicap. Whisper moved like a ghost, struck like death, vanished like smoke.
Zeph maintained distance, positioning himself fifty meters back—maximum range for Wind Blade. He activated the skill, channeling 20 MP hrough his crude goblin axe.
The compressed air blade formed and launched in complete silence. He couldn’t hear it cut through the air, couldn’t hear the impact when it struck the creature’s shoulder, couldn’t hear the wet tearing sound that should have accompanied the blade severing bio-mechanical tissue.
But he saw the result. Saw the shoulder joint separate. Saw the arm hang useless. Saw bioluminescent blood spray from the wound in a pressurized stream.
The construct bled glowing blue when damaged. The blood splashed across the floor, began pooling, began spreading in familiar predatory patterns. Learning from the upper passage encounters, everyone maintained distance from the growing pools, careful not to repeat the contamination incident that had killed Andrew and led to the execution of five companions.
The fight continued in eerie silence. Tank blocked attacks he couldn’t hear coming, relying entirely on visual tracking. Kael and Seris circled, struck, retreated, their teamwork suffering from inability to communicate. Whisper appeared and disappeared, each strike precise and calculated. Zeph launched another Wind Blade from safe distance.
The construct was strong but not intelligent enough to adapt to multiple attackers with different fighting styles. It focused on Tank, trying to overwhelm his defense through sustained pressure, which left it vulnerable to flanking attacks from Kael and Seris and assassination strikes from Whisper.
Zeph watched the pools of bioluminescent blood spreading across the floor, creating hazard zones that limited movement options. The blood was definitely alive in some sense—it moved with purpose, reached toward combatants, created tendrils that searched for flesh to infect.
Then it happened.
Seris, focused on the construct, circling for another attack angle, stepped backward to avoid a sweeping strike.
Her boot came down in a pool of glowing blue blood.
Zeph saw it happen. Saw her boot sink into the liquid. Saw the blood climb up the leather like it was alive and hungry.
Seris looked down. Saw her boot glowing. Saw the contamination spreading up from the sole.
She SCREAMED—Zeph saw her mouth open wide, saw her throat work with the force of it, saw the terror on her face. No sound emerged. Just silent screaming, horror expressed without auditory component.
Kael saw her scream, didn’t understand why immediately. By the time he followed her gaze and noticed the glowing boot, the infection had started to spread—the leather was darkening, beginning to transform, the contamination racing up toward her ankle where flesh waited to be converted.
Seris made a choice.
She dropped to the ground, hands frantically working at her boot laces, pulling at the fastenings with desperate speed. Her fingers fumbled, trembling with panic, but she forced herself to maintain enough control to actually remove the boot rather than just panicking.
The boot came off just as the glow reached where her ankle had been moments before. She threw it away from her with force that suggested she was throwing away a venomous snake, her face twisted with horror and relief in equal measure.
The boot landed in a larger pool of blood, was immediately consumed by spreading contamination, began to transform into something crystalline and wrong.
Seris scrambled backward, checking her foot frantically. Her sock was intact. Her skin was intact. She’d stopped the contamination at surface level, had sacrificed her footwear but saved her flesh. Close call. Terrifyingly close call.
Kael reached her, pulled her further from the blood pools, his face showing the same relief and residual terror. They’d seen what happened to people who didn’t stop the contamination in time. They’d watched Andrew transform. They knew how close Seris had come to the same fate.
The construct, distracted by the commotion, turned toward Seris and Kael.
Tank saw the threat, moved to intercept, shield raised.
Zeph saw an opening. The construct’s back was exposed, its attention divided, its defenses compromised by previous damage.
He activated Wind Blade one final time, channeling 20 MP
The blade struck the back of the construct’s neck where bio-mechanical components met organic tissue.
Perfect hit.
The head separated from the body with surgical precision, severed cleanly. Both pieces collapsed—the body crumpling, the head rolling across the floor trailing blue blood.
Tank
The construct stopped moving. Defeated. Dead or deactivated or whatever the equivalent was for bio-mechanical constructs that had never been truly alive in the first place.
But the blood remained. Pools of glowing blue across the chamber floor, spreading, searching, creating a maze of contamination that they would need to navigate carefully to reach the exit.
The group stood there for a moment, processing what had just happened. Processing the fight conducted in silence, the near-contamination, the kill achieved through coordination despite inability to communicate verbally.
Tank signaled with hand gestures: Move. Carefully. Avoid blood. Exit.
They navigated through the pools with extreme caution, mapping a path between spreading contamination, Seris now limping slightly from walking on one bare foot. The organic metal floor was cold against her sock, uncomfortable but preferable to transformation into a crystalline monster.
They reached the far doorway after perhaps two minutes of careful navigation.
The threshold was clear. Beyond it, another passage stretched into darkness.
The moment all five of them crossed the threshold, sound RETURNED.
The rush of noise was overwhelming after absolute quiet. The breathing of the ruins roared in their ears like a freight train. Their own footsteps sounded impossibly loud. The ambient sounds they’d learned to ignore before the silence zone now seemed deafening.
Kael broke down crying immediately—delayed reaction to stress, to terror, to phantom sounds he’d heard in the silence. The tears were silent but his body shook with sobs that were now audible, ragged breathing interspersed with gasping sounds.
Seris comforted him, her voice hoarse from screaming that had produced no sound. "It’s okay, we’re through it, we made it, the sound is back, we’re okay." Her words came out shaky but determined, forcing calm through repetition.
Tank checked everyone’s mental state with visible concern. "Everyone still functional? Anyone breaking down beyond recovery?"
"Define functional," Kael managed between sobs.
"Can you keep walking?"
"...yes."
"Then you’re functional enough."
Whisper made their contribution with perfect timing: "Well, that was the worst concert I’ve ever attended. No sound, terrible ambiance, the opening act tried to kill us. Zero stars, would not recommend."
The attempt at humor was so perfectly timed and delivered that even Kael laughed through his tears—a sound somewhere between sobbing and laughing, cathartic and slightly hysterical.
Zeph said nothing. Just checked his CP.
Current CP: 18/100.
The construct fight had counted as active combat. One full minute of engagement had generated 12 CP on top of the 6 he’d accumulated from the earlier trap encounter.
Current survivor count for Shadow Path: 5/5.
They were all still alive, still functional, still moving forward.
The Shadow Path had thrown silence, hallucinations, bio-mechanical horrors, and contamination at them.
And they’d survived.
For now.







