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Darkness.

Bryan's eyes snapped open. He shot upright in bed, one broad hand pressed against his heaving chest, gasping for air. He sat there in the dim room, staring at nothing, for a long ti.

After a mont, he turned to look at the faintly lightening sky outside the window. He touched his face instinctively. The dream—so vivid, so real—lingered at the edges of his consciousness, carrying a strange sense of déjà vu he couldn't explain.

But even as he tried to grasp the details, they slipped away like smoke. Within monts, he couldn't recall a single specific image.

He sighed, let it go for now, and threw off the covers. He walked into the bathroom, turned on the faucet, cupped the cold water in his hands, and splashed it over his face. The shock of it brought instant clarity.

He wiped the remaining droplets away and looked up at the mirror.

The person staring back was eighteen or nineteen years old. Clean-cut black hair, a handso face, faint stubble darkening his jaw and chin.

He pulled off the white tank top—soaked through with sweat—revealing a well-built, muscular fra. He grabbed a towel and began cleaning up.

Once finished, he stepped out, hung the damp tank top on the balcony railing, pulled an identical one from the closet, and walked to the living room table. He picked up a notice that had been left there and scanned its contents:

NOTICE

Sergeant Bryan is to report to the District F Administration Center at 0800 hours on June 4, 2019, for assignnt to an external supply collection mission.

— QZ Administration Center

Seeing that he still had ti, Bryan rubbed his aching eyes and lay back down, intending to rest a while longer.

Five full years had passed since the Cordyceps outbreak. The world—both inside the Quarantine Zones and beyond—had transford beyond recognition.

...

In the second year after the outbreak, the leader of the Atlanta QZ—the city's forr mayor—had died of illness. The deputy mayor succeeded him, and with that transition, the QZ's trajectory changed.

Within months of taking office, the new leader issued an order that shook the entire zone to its foundations. The research effort to develop a Cordyceps vaccine had consud enormous resources with virtually nothing to show for it. He announced the permanent cessation of all vaccine research, redirecting the saved resources toward improving QZ welfare and security.

The decision split the population in half. Opponents argued that abandoning vaccine research ant abandoning humanity's last hope—condemning everyone to life behind these walls forever. Supporters countered that years of fruitless research had been a waste, and the resources were better spent on the people living here and now.

The unrest simred for six months. Ultimately, when people realized the policy change hadn't affected their daily lives, the protests faded.

Two more years passed. As residents adapted to life inside the walls, the comfort of routine began to corrode those in power. The appetites of officials and military officers—kept in check by early fears of exposure—began to grow.

At first, the corruption was cautious. Small skims. Plausible deniability. But gradually, they discovered that military authority granted them near-total impunity. Nobody was watching the watchn.

One person's greed inspired the next. The ranks of the corrupt swelled. Those with enough integrity to file reports found their complaints intercepted and themselves punished—charged with slander, subjected to hard labor, or expelled from the QZ entirely.

As an old saying went: when corruption becos the norm, honesty becos the cri. The rot spread through the QZ's governnt and military like wildfire.

Soldiers overseeing labor details pushed civilians harder—longer hours, heavier workloads. Factory managers exploited the soldiers. District administrators exploited the factory managers. And at the top, leadership skimd the lion's share from every supply run. What actually reached the hands of ordinary soldiers and civilians was a fraction of the whole. The buying power of supply cards plumted month after month.

Residents who recognized the unsustainability of depending on monthly rations imdiately sought alternatives. Digging tunnels to the outside and scavenging for themselves beca the obvious first choice.

The scale grew steadily, exactly as Bryan had predicted years ago. Smuggled goods were used to bribe district officials. Weapons and ammunition flowed back in return. The military looked the other way.

An organized black market erged. Near-expired food that couldn't be consud in ti was sold for bullets, supply cards, clothing, and everyday necessities. So entrepreneurs even ventured outside to trap animals—feral dogs, rats, whatever they could catch—and sold them at the market. Live animals fetched a premium.

Before long, it had beco the largest underground market in the QZ. Access required an introduction—you couldn't find the entrance without a guide. The people who operated in this gray zone beca known to soldiers and civilians alike as smugglers.

As ti ground on, the QZ's ruling class tightened their grip. Ordinary residents were no longer treated as citizens. They were labor—human resources generating an endless stream of value for those at the top.

The QZ had beco a petty kingdom. Oppression grew brazen. The military served as the ruling class's blade. Dissent was t with death or exile.

The result: luxury for the powerful, subsistence for everyone else. The people at the bottom scraped by on their monthly supply card allotnts, exchanging backbreaking labor for barely enough to survive.

This persisted for nearly a year. Then, after one particularly brutal incident of military violence against civilians, soone snapped. A resident attacked a soldier in broad daylight. Others joined in, venting their pent-up fury. The two soldiers were beaten to death.

It was like kicking a hornet's nest. The military deployed in force, rounding up every person who'd been present—participants and bystanders alike. No distinction was made. Everyone was detained.

The QZ leadership recognized the simring resentnt among the lower classes. But rather than seek reconciliation or reform, they chose rage. These people—these slaves, in their eyes—had dared to strike back. The response would be harsh enough to crush any further defiance.

The ringleaders were sentenced to death. All other participants received three years of penal labor—the most grueling, dangerous work the QZ had to offer. Even bystanders—guilty only of watching soldiers get attacked and failing to intervene—received one year of hard labor.

The sentences sent shockwaves through the QZ. And in the hearts of many, a seed of rebellion took root.

Over the following months, acts of resistance multiplied. Each ti, the perpetrators were arrested and punished more severely than the last.

Finally, when it beca undeniable that the QZ leadership would never care about their lives, a group of people who wanted change found each other. They t in secret, organized, and ford the QZ's first resistance movent.

They spent months building contacts, acquiring weapons and ammunition. Just as the leadership believed stability had been restored, the rebels struck—launching coordinated attacks on QZ checkpoints in a bid to seize control.

Months later, the mory of that day remained seared into every survivor's mind. The entire QZ drowned in smoke. Gunfire, explosions, screams—everyone huddled inside their hos, paralyzed with fear.

The rebels managed to capture several checkpoints. But their equipnt was vastly inferior to the military's. Reinforcents arrived and crushed the uprising. The vast majority of the fighters were killed. A small number escaped.

In the aftermath, the resistance recognized that they couldn't challenge the QZ's power structure head-on. Not yet. So chose to go underground—staying inside the QZ, recruiting new mbers in secret. Others arranged passage through sympathetic smugglers, paying their way out of the QZ to establish an external base of operations. The two factions maintained close contact, with smugglers serving as the critical link for moving people and supplies across the walls.

Most smugglers refused outright. Their livelihoods depended on the QZ's existence. If the zone fell, they'd lose everything.

But a few—drawn by the enormous profits generated by the conflict between two warring factions—chose to help.

And so the resistance went dormant. They stockpiled weapons. Recruited fighters. Grew their strength by any ans necessary. When they located military ammunition depots, they raided or destroyed them. Supply convoys heading outside were ambushed and plundered. A constant campaign of attrition, small but relentless.

The war between the Fireflies and the Quarantine Zone governnt had begun.

...

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