[Chapter 23: A Small Ho in the Forest]
The transition from the scorched, silent graveyard of the tropolis to the vibrant, whispering green of the northern woods was jarring. Searanox stood in the center of the clearing, his shadow long against the mossy earth as the sun began its slow descent. He wasn't interested in the scenery for its own sake; he saw the forest as a blueprint, a foundation for the fortress he intended to build.
With a flick of his wrist and a sharp ntal tether, he accessed his summoning nu.
─ [ 3 Travel Drones]
─ [ 4 Reconnaissance Drones]
"Fly to the nearest population center," he commanded, his voice a low drone that mirrored the machines. "Scan for female survivors that et my aesthetic criteria—health, age, potential for growth. Hover above them to mark the target and notify the Travel Drones for imdiate extraction. Bring them here. Intact."
The drones didn't hesitate. They split into two wings, their drives humming as they accelerated to their optimal cruising speeds, disappearing through the canopy in a blur of matte black and chro.
Next, he turned his attention to logistics.
─ [ 5 Cargo Drones]
"Acquire housing," he ordered the lead unit. "Find a high-end mobile camper, a modular shed, or a pre-built ho. Sothing durable and comfortable. Go."
One of the bulky Cargo Drones peeled off, its dinsional storage bays ready to swallow an entire structure whole.
"Are you certain this is a wise allocation of our remaining ti and resources?" Iris asked. She had been standing perfectly still, her silver eyes tracking the drones until they vanished. Her voice was calm, but there was a sharp, analytical edge to her question.
Searanox turned to her. For a fleeting second, his mouth curved upward, a flash of white teeth visible in a predatory grin. By the ti he had fully turned to face her, however, the smile was gone, replaced by the flat, cold mask of the Dronemancer.
"I am certain, Iris. We have been working toward this mont since the first chicken died. We have earned the right to a secure base. Consider this 'resource acquisition.' We need a place to sleep that isn't a car seat—comfortable bedding, climate control, and security from the elents."
He stepped closer to her, his eyes darkening with a long-term vision.
"This isn't a two-person ga, Iris. The System rewards parties. I want a team. If they aren't on the front lines with us, they will be the support structure. Who keeps order at the base if we are both out hunting? Who manages the logistics? Loyalty is more easily secured through shared safety and the promise of a future than through a blade alone."
The logic was sound—uncomfortably so. It was the pragmatism of a king building a court from the wreckage of a world. Iris inhaled slowly, her mind already running the numbers on room assignnts and periter security.
"Understood," she said. "I will prepare the site for our new acquisitions."
She didn't use a shovel or a saw. Instead, she scanned the clearing, evaluating the soil density and the natural sightlines of the surrounding oaks. In a single, fluid motion, she activated [Blade Step].
The air shivered with a high-pitched whine of arcane distortion. Iris vanished, reappearing thirty feet away in a blur of silver and grey. Her Eldritch Zweihänder manifested in her hands, its massive blade humming with a low-frequency vibration that made the very air feel heavy. She moved like a dancer in a hurricane.
With surgical precision, she swung the greatsword. Massive ancient oaks fell cleanly, their trunks severed as if by a laser. Undergrowth was vaporized or leveled into a flat, packed-dirt floor. Within minutes, she had carved a defensible campsite out of the raw wilderness—a geotric scar of order in the chaos of the forest.
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"I am ready, Searanox," she called out, her breath steady despite the exertion.
He nodded, a thin smile touching his lips. He watched ten more Cargo Drones lift off with a new directive: Strip every local supermarket. Leave nothing for the scavengers.
"It seems we are both ready," he said, walking to the center of her cleared zone. "Now, we just wait for the delivery. When our 'guests' arrive, Iris, you will ensure they understand the new hierarchy. Make sure they don't develop any ideas about running back to a world that no longer exists."
He sat down on a freshly cut log, the scent of pine sap thick in the air. "It's almost ti. The Mana Infusion begins in a few hours. I’ve pushed us both to Level 15; now we find out if the 'unprecedented' achievent actually ans we survive the first wave."
The First Acquisition
Searanox didn't have to wait long.
The first Reconnaissance Drone pulsed with a priority alert, the psychic link painting a vivid picture in his mind. Target located. A young woman, perhaps nineteen or twenty, was jogging alone through a suburban park miles away. She had shoulder-length dirty blonde hair tied back in a ssy ponytail, wearing high-end athletic gear. She was fit—a pri candidate for a low-level combatant or a support specialist.
It was still a surreal sensation for Searanox—to feel the wind through a drone’s sensors and see the world through a dozen different lenses simultaneously. It was disorienting, yet it made him feel like a god. He gave a ntal flick of confirmation.
A Travel Drone swooped in silently from the clouds. Its anti-gravity field expanded, enveloping the girl before she could even register the sudden drop in temperature. She vanished from the jogging path in a faint distortion of refracted light.
Minutes later, the drone erged over the forest clearing. The young woman was frozen like a statue atop the disk, held in place by the stasis field. As the drone descended, it vanished in a cloud of blue sparks. The girl ca stumbling out of the light, gasping for air and clutching her chest in a fit of pure, unadulterated confusion.
Before she could even scream, Iris moved.
She didn't use violence, but her presence was a physical weight. The half-wolf Eldritch Knight stepped out from the shadows of the trees, her silver-threaded mane catching the fading sunlight, her amber eyes fixed on the girl with an intensity that promised a quick end to any resistance.
The girl froze. This wasn't a kidnapping; this was a nightmare brought to life.
"You are safe," Iris said, her voice a low, lodic rumble. "You will not be hard if you remain compliant. But you will stay here. Do you understand?"
The girl was trembling so hard her teeth chattered. She could only manage a weak, terrified nod.
"Iris, honey, you’re scaring the help," Searanox said calmly from his log. He patted his thigh, a casual gesture that seed wildly out of place. "Co here."
Iris's ears twitched, a slight flush of color touching her cheeks, before she padded over and took her place by his side.
"Who... who are you?" the girl stamred, her eyes darting between the man in the hoodie and the wolf-woman.
Searanox sighed. "Call Searanox. Like she said, we don't intend to hurt you. But in about three hours, the world you grew up in—the one with police, and laws, and 9-to-5 jobs—is going to end. The rules won't apply anymore because there won't be anyone left to enforce them. You're here because I decided you were worth saving."
He reached up and scratched Iris behind her pointed ear. She let out a soft, involuntary growl of contentnt, nuzzling into his hand. She behaves like a puppy when the drones aren't watching, he thought with a flicker of amusent.
The Logistics of a God
Then, the floodgates opened.
The drones began to return in a constant, buzzing stream. First ca the Cargo Drones assigned to the food run. Searanox commanded them to dump their loads at the northern edge of the clearing.
In less than ten minutes, a literal mountain of food had been created. Crates of canned at, bags of flour, thousands of gallons of bottled water, and boxes of chocolate bars piled up twenty feet high.
I forgot about the ten-tis multiplier, Searanox realized, staring at the sheer volu of supplies. A single drone can carry a ton of cargo... and I sent ten. That’s enough food to feed a small village for a year.
Just as he was admiring the hoard, a massive shadow fell over the clearing. A specialized Cargo Drone descended through the canopy, carrying a large, modular living unit. It landed with a bone-jarring thud that shook the forest floor.
The pre-built ho looked like a high-end shipping container that had undergone a luxury renovation—sleek black siding, reinforced glass windows, and solar panels on the roof. It was a box of modern comfort dropped into a prival woods.
Then, seemingly without rhy or reason, the drone began to "unload" the rest of its dinsional storage. It was like watching a furniture store vomit. Tables, plush velvet chairs, king-sized mattresses, an entire porcelain bathroom suite, and rolls of premium carpet were dropped in a chaotic heap in front of the unit.
"Iris, you’re in charge of interior design," Searanox said, gesturing vaguely toward the pile of furniture and the shimring cloud of blue sparks above it.
He stood up and walked toward the mountain of food. He reached into a crate and pulled out a glass jar of sausages. With a sharp twist, the vacuum seal popped. He grabbed a loaf of bread and a bottle of mustard from the pile, beginning to eat with a calm, thodical hunger as if nothing out of the ordinary were happening.
The kidnapped girl watched from the sidelines, her mouth agape. She was witnessing the end of the world and the birth of a new one, all centered around a man eating a cold sausage in a clearing filled with stolen luxury furniture.
It was, quite literally, the stuff of a fever dream.
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