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Global Mutation: The Hunger System-Chapter 29: The Arsenal
The sweeping arc of the Inner Stadium concourse was a monument to human denial.
As Ren navigated the broad, polished corridor, his heavy combat boots left distinct, dark tracks of freezing water and Benthic Weaver blood across the immaculate white marble tiles. The climate-controlled air washed over him, completely devoid of the toxic ash that choked Sector Four. Instead, the enclosed space was heavily saturated with the sharp, chemical burn of industrial floor wax, the rich, intoxicating aroma of roasted coffee beans from the officer’s mess hall, and the faint, metallic tang of ozone radiating from the overhead LED strips.
Hundreds of people inhabited the wide promenade, and every single one of them stopped to stare.
Men and women dressed in tailored wool suits and clean civilian clothing paused their quiet conversations. Coalition soldiers in pristine, pressed black fatigues lowered their ceramic mugs, their hands instinctively drifting toward the sidearms holstered at their waists. They looked at Ren and Chloe not with the starving desperation of the refugees outside, but with the profound, visceral disgust of aristocrats forced to share oxygen with a rabid dog.
Ren ignored them entirely. He didn’t tighten his jaw, nor did he break his measured, predatory stride. His Far Sight passive swept the environment, analyzing the structural vulnerabilities of the vaulted ceilings and the precise patrol routes of the military police. He was a Level 11 anomaly walking through a room full of Level 2 and Level 3 bureaucrats. They were utterly irrelevant to his progression.
Chloe, however, struggled to maintain the facade.
The heat in this corridor is making me dizzy, Chloe thought, her wet denim jeans clinging uncomfortably to her thawing legs. She wrapped her arms tightly around her chest, keeping her eyes fixed on the center of Ren’s soaked grey hoodie. Everyone is staring at us like we’re infected. But Ren isn’t even blinking. I need to stop shaking and act like I belong behind him.
They bypassed a sprawling, canvas-walled medical pavilion and a heavily guarded rations depot before reaching the primary objective.
The Camp Alpha Armory occupied the entire northern curve of the Stadium’s subterranean level. It was sealed behind a massive, twelve-inch-thick vault door salvaged from a pre-apocalypse bank, the sheer weight of the steel sinking deeply into the reinforced concrete floor. Beside the open vault stood a highly secure requisition counter, encased entirely in three inches of ballistic glass. The heavy, unmistakable scent of Hoppe’s No. 9 gun solvent, freshly machined brass, and blued steel bled through the ventilation grates.
Behind the ballistic glass sat Lieutenant Voss.
Voss was a soft man wearing a crisp, perfectly tailored officer’s uniform. He possessed a receding hairline slicked back with heavy pomade, a perfectly trimmed auburn mustache, and the unmistakable, slightly rounded belly of a man who had never skipped a meal during the global collapse. He leaned back in an ergonomic mesh chair, idly scrolling through a digital tablet with immaculately clean, uncalloused fingers.
Ren stepped up to the counter, entirely blocking the ambient light from the corridor.
Voss didn’t look up immediately. He tapped the screen of his tablet, his annoyance radiating through the thick glass. "Requisitions are closed until 0800 hours. Read the sign, scavenger."
Ren raised his left hand and pressed the matte black polymer of the Class-A tag flat against the ballistic glass, directly in the center of Voss’s line of sight.
The Lieutenant finally raised his head. He blinked, taking in the horrific, soaked state of Ren’s clothing, the dark blue stains completely ruining the grey fabric, and the absolute, terrifying stillness of the boy’s posture. Voss’s eyes darted to the silver RFID chip embedded in the tag.
Look at this swamp trash tracking mud across my floor, Lieutenant Voss thought, his lip curling in a sneer of barely concealed contempt. I don’t care if his tag flashed green at the gate. I’m not handing over the heavy ordnance to a street scavenger. I’ll pass him some surplus scraps and keep the good stuff for the Colonel’s boys.
"Pass it through the tray," Voss sighed, gesturing lazily toward the heavy steel transaction drawer bolted into the counter.
Ren dropped the tag into the steel divot. Voss operated a hydraulic lever, pulling the drawer inward. He swiped the tag across his terminal. The screen flashed brilliant green, confirming Tier-3 Armory Access.
"Tier-3," Voss muttered, his tone dripping with skepticism. He tapped the glass with a thick knuckle. "Must have found a hell of a shiny rock in the ruins to buy that off the quartermaster. Fine. Standard issue for fresh Class-A citizens is one Beretta M9 pistol, two spare magazines, and a surplus Kevlar vest. Sign the digital waiver."
Voss pushed a heavy clipboard into the steel transaction drawer and shoved it back through the slot toward Ren.
Ren didn’t look at the clipboard. He didn’t speak. He simply activated the Intimidation passive.
The psychological weight dropped into the narrow space like a physical anvil. The air temperature on Ren’s side of the glass seemed to plummet ten degrees. Voss felt the sudden, crushing pressure against his sternum, a primal, suffocating dread that instantly triggered the deepest survival instincts in his brain stem. The soft officer stopped breathing, his eyes widening as he looked into Ren’s glowing, violet irises.
Ren reached into the narrow opening of the transaction slot. He didn’t grab the clipboard. He clamped his right hand directly onto the half-inch-thick solid steel plating of the drawer itself.
His Chitin Shell hardened his skin to a pale, metallic grey beneath the cuffs of his ruined hoodie. Ren channeled the raw, explosive kinetic force of his Level 11 Strength stat entirely into his right wrist. He twisted his arm counter-clockwise.
The solid steel shrieked.
The thick metal drawer warped instantly under the unnatural torque, buckling upward and folding entirely in half like a piece of cheap aluminum foil. The hydraulic mechanism snapped with a sharp, violent crack, spraying a thin mist of pressurized fluid onto the inside of the ballistic glass.
Voss scrambled backward in his ergonomic chair, his pristine boots kicking wildly against the floor tiles as he slammed into the rear wall of his booth. His mouth opened, but the Intimidation aura strangled the scream in his throat. 𝒻𝑟𝘦𝘦𝘸ℯ𝒷𝑛𝘰𝓋ℯ𝘭.𝘤𝘰𝘮
"The standard issue is insufficient," Ren stated, his voice a low, terrifying vibration that easily penetrated the three-inch glass. "I require the Tier-3 armaments. Open the vault door."
He bent the steel, Voss thought, his mind entirely fracturing under the impossibility of the physical act. He bent half an inch of solid steel with his bare hand. What the hell is he?
Voss’s hands trembled violently as he fumbled for the heavy ring of magnetic keys clipped to his belt. He didn’t reach for the panic button. The sheer proximity of the apex predator convinced his primitive brain that pressing the alarm would result in his immediate death. He stumbled forward, swiping a red keycard against the primary console.
The massive, twelve-inch-thick vault door hissed loudly, the heavy locking tumblers disengaging with a series of deep, metallic thuds. The door swung outward on oiled hinges, revealing the cavernous interior of the Arsenal.
Ren stepped away from the ruined transaction counter, gesturing for Chloe to follow him into the vault.
The interior of the armory was a scavenger’s ultimate fantasy. Racks of meticulously maintained M4 carbines, heavy tactical shotguns, and precision sniper rifles lined the steel-reinforced walls. Wooden crates stacked twelve feet high contained tens of thousands of rounds of varied ammunition. Heavy tactical plate carriers, advanced night-vision optics, and medical trauma kits occupied the center tables.
"Gear up," Ren ordered Chloe, his violet eyes sweeping the racks. "Take whatever you can comfortably carry. Prioritize stopping power and maneuverability."
Chloe didn’t need to be told twice. She bypassed the standard pistols entirely. She moved directly to a rack of customized submachine guns, pulling down a sleek, black FN P90. The compact, bullpup design was perfect for tight urban quarters, and the fifty-round top-mounted magazine offered overwhelming suppressive fire. She grabbed a lightweight, Level III-A tactical plate carrier, adjusting the velcro straps over her damp jacket, and began stuffing spare magazines, a combat knife, and four M67 fragmentation grenades into the webbing pouches.
Ren walked slowly down the center aisle, completely ignoring the rows of conventional firearms. His Echolocation and Perception stats were searching for something else. The military hoarded everything they found in the ruins, including things they didn’t fundamentally understand.
He stopped at the very back of the vault.
A heavy, biometric lockbox sat entirely isolated on a steel workbench. It didn’t contain a firearm. Through the reinforced glass lid, Ren saw a long, jagged blade wrapped in heavy, conductive wiring. It was a high-frequency vibro-sword, clearly salvaged from a high-level humanoid boss out in the wasteland. The blade was forged from a dark, iridescent metal that seemed to absorb the harsh overhead light, and a fist-sized, crimson monster core was violently jammed into the pommel, serving as an unstable power source.
The weapon pulsed with a faint, erratic heat, completely incompatible with human biology.
Ren shattered the glass lid of the lockbox with a single, casual strike of his bare fist. He reached inside and wrapped his hand around the heavily wired hilt.
The crimson core recognized the foreign, monstrous mana signature of the Gluttony skill instantly. The iridescent blade shrieked to life, the metal blurring as it vibrated at tens of thousands of cycles per second. The air around the steel rippled with intense thermal distortion, smelling sharply of ozone and burning copper.
They organize their lethal assets based on bureaucratic rank instead of practical utility, Ren thought, a dark smile pulling at the corners of his mouth as he felt the destructive kinetic energy humming against his palm. This blade would amputate a human arm the second they activated it. But for me, it is a perfect carving knife.
Ren swings the vibrating sword in a wide, testing arc, the blade silently shearing a clean, diagonal line completely through the solid steel workbench beside him as he turns and walks purposefully toward the vault exit.







