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The news called it a health crisis first.

That was their first lie.

---

Three weeks before the dead started walking, every major television network ran the sa crawling red banner across the bottom of their screens — UNKNOWN PATHOGEN REPORTED IN MULTIPLE CITIES. AUTHORITIES URGE CALM. Health officials in pressed suits stood behind podiums and used words like "contained" and "manageable" and "no cause for public alarm" with the kind of rehearsed confidence that only ant one thing.

They had no idea what they were dealing with.

Michael Hartfield rembered watching that first broadcast from his couch, a bowl of instant noodles going cold in his lap, half-paying attention. He was twenty-four years old, worked a dead-end data entry job for a logistics company he had never cared about, and lived alone in a two-bedroom apartnt on the sixth floor of a building in the middle of the city that slled faintly of mildew and other people’s cooking. His life was ordinary in every sense of the word.

He’d changed the channel.

He would wished, more than anything now, that he had paid closer attention.

---

The second wave of broadcasts ca ten days later, and this ti, nobody was talking about containnt.

Footage leaked online before the networks could sanitize it. Shaky phone videos shot through cracked windows and from behind overturned cars. People in the streets who moved unnaturally with pale skins and their heads tilted at angles that made the stomach turn. People who should have been dead, given the wounds they were carrying, walking like the pain ant nothing.

Because it did an nothing. They were already gone.

The virus had a na by then, VX-9, coined by so researcher who probably wasn’t alive anymore to regret the clinical detachnt of it. What it did was anything but clinical. It killed its host within forty-eight hours of infection. Fever, hemorrhaging, organ failure, a brutal and rciless process. And then, sowhere in the ruin of the brainstem, sothing kept firing.

Governnts deployed military within the week. Quarantine zones were established. Evacuation routes were broadcast on every channel, every hour. There were announcents about ergency shelters, about food distribution points, about staying indoors and waiting for the situation to be resolved.

Michael had believed them. He had stocked his apartnt with what he had, two weeks of canned food, bottled water, a kitchen knife he’d never sharpened, and he had waited.

That was his second mistake.

---

By Day Fourteen, the quarantine zones had collapsed.

He heard it before he saw it. The city, which had gone eerily quiet over the preceding week as people evacuated or barricaded themselves inside, suddenly erupted.

Screaming from sowhere below. The deep, rhythmic thunder of a helicopter that grew louder and then cut off mid-pass in a way that ant it wasn’t landing. Car alarms. Gunshots — three sharp cracks, then silence, then a sound that wasn’t quite human and wasn’t quite animal and sat sowhere in the space between that made every nerve in his body stand at attention.

Michael had gone to his window and looked down at the street six floors below.

He imdiately wished he hadn’t.

The evacuation convoy that had been staged two blocks down with four military trucks and a personnel carrier that had represented, in his mind, the last organized thread of civilization in this part of the city, was gone. Not moved. Gone. One of the trucks was on its side, the windshield caved inward. Soldiers were scattered across the asphalt in states he didn’t let his eyes linger on. And moving through the wreckage, unhurried, heads turning slowly like they were tasting the air —

They were rotters all over, dozens of them.

Michael had stepped back from the window.

His hands were shaking.

---

That had been four days ago.

Now it was Day Eighteen, and the city outside his window was a graveyard that hadn’t finished filling up yet.

He’d rationed carefully. The water was holding. The food was not. He had maybe three days left of anything aningful, after that it was condint packets and the grim arithtic of survival math. He hadn’t slept more than two hours at a stretch since the convoy fell. Every sound from the hallway outside his door pulled him upright with the kitchen knife in his hand and his heart trying to exit his chest.

Three tis, sothing had tried his door. Twice it had moved on. The third ti he had heard the wet, dragging sound of it for forty minutes before it finally went quiet.

He was exhausted. He was starving. He was alone in a dead city in a dead world and the walls were closing in by the hour.

Michael sat on the floor of his kitchen with his back against the cabinet beneath the sink, knees pulled to his chest, listening to the silence outside and trying to rember what it felt like to not be afraid.

He couldn’t.

’This is it,’ he thought, ’This is how it ends. Alone. In an apartnt that slls like mildew. Without even doing anything worth rembering.’

He closed his eyes.

And then —

---

[Ding!]

Michael’s eyes snapped open.

The sound hadn’t co from outside. It hadn’t co from the hallway or the street or anywhere in the physical world at all. It had co from inside his head, like a notification chi played directly against the inside of his skull.

A screen materialized in front of him.

---

[Ding! You have Awakened the Sovereign Build System!]

[Welco, Host. Your designation has been confird. Initialization complete.]

---

Michael stared.

He looked to his left. To his right. Back at the screen.

It waited.

"...What," he said in confusion starting at the screen unbelievably.

---

[Ding! Skill Awarded: Anchor Point]

[Designate any location as your sovereign territory. Access the Blueprint Interface to design, plan, and construct structures. Deposit required materials to instantly raise any blueprint. Your base begins where you plant your mark. Upgrade your Anchor to expand what’s possible.]

[Ding! Skill Awarded: Multishop]

[Your personal store. Always stocked. Never closed. Purchase real-world supplies with Survival Points earned from kills, quests, and rescues. Purchase system-exclusive skills, upgrades, and abilities with Bond Points earned through deepening connections with those under your protection.]

[The apocalypse emptied the shelves. Yours are always full.]

---

[Current SP: 0]

[Current BP: 0]

[Awaiting first command, Host.]

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