©WebNovelPub
The Winter Tyrant-Chapter 19: Consolidation
Dean returned to his bedroom to find Yuki sitting there with the drone in hand. She inspected the device with curiosity, her eyes wide with intrigue, and her lips curled into a smile. She was clearly excited by what she had just done, as she jumped up and welcomed Dean home.
"Welcome back, papa bear...."
There was a playful tone in her voice, as she was clearly mocking Dean for his provocative choice of callsigns. He fetched the drone from the girl’s hand and placed it on his dresser next to the others before turning around and smirking at her.
"Thanks, mama bear...."
Yuki instantly pouted when she realized she hadn’t gotten under Dean’s skin, but he stopped her in her tracks before she could protest.
"Good job today... I knew I could trust you."
Those words immediately froze whatever fury Yuki had been preparing, causing her to flush red while wearing a satisfied grin.
"Thanks...."
Dean then helped her out of the plate carrier and helmet. It was a simple matter of pulling several quick-release buckles, but nonetheless he ensured Yuki did so with care.
"Alright, how about you go make us both some breakfast? I still have a few things to handle here."
Yuki didn’t bother asking what. She had learned it was best not to ask questions about Dean’s plans; especially after she had earned his trust with her help today. If he felt the need to tell her, he would. And that was good enough for her.
But she did turn around one last moment at the door and peer back inside.
"Be safe...."
With that said, she scurried off before Dean could properly respond, leaving him alone to chuckle and shake his head as he placed the drone on its charger and pulled out a slightly different device beside it.
This quadcopter was slightly larger in size and had a greater power-to-thrust ratio. While it was still dressed in the same camouflage skin as the others, there was a mounting point at the bottom for attaching items and releasing them with the press of a button on his remote.
Dean pulled out a piece of paper he had prepared in advance and attached it to the bottom of the drone. He then connected the device to his setup before sitting down on his bed.
Lowering his FPV goggles over his eyes from their helmet mount, he flipped out his controller and began to pilot the machine off his balcony and into the snow beyond.
Dean performed a brief overwatch sweep of the perimeter using both thermal and standard cameras before flying the drone over to the community center, where he suspected the survivors had fled.
As Dean had predicted, the survivors of the massacre had gathered in the community center. Many were in a state of complete shock. Others suffered from wounds that varied in severity.
Avery sat against the wall, resting with her head slumped to the side. She didn’t cry, nor did she smile. She was completely checked out; as if she had died, but was still walking among the living.
She couldn’t believe what she had seen. She couldn’t begin to fathom what Dean had done. How could that man, the one she had pledged to marry, the one she had cared for after his parents died, be so ruthless and violent?
Naturally, she had been aware of his career in the Air National Guard. But it was the Air Force... Since when were they bloodthirsty killers?
During the years of their relationship, Dean had told her what SERE meant, and what reconnaissance was. At the time, she had nodded her head and asked the right questions, but she had never truly looked into it.
And when he had deployed during the early days of their relationship, she had assumed he worked in an office somewhere far from enemy lines; flying a drone over some foreign battlefield or operating a satellite to track troop movements.
Because of this misunderstanding, born from her own lack of curiosity about her fiancé’s background, and his humility regarding his service as "just another reserve officer," Avery had always mistaken Dean’s restraint for weakness.
It was not until she saw Richard enter the building, shivering from the cold, that Avery finally snapped out of her daze.
"You! You bastard! You left me to die! You’re worse than Dean! At least he had the nerve to break off our engagement before abandoning me! But you! You are nothing more than a spineless thug!"
Avery’s outburst immediately drew several glances her way. But she was too enraged to notice that others had begun to pick apart the contradiction in her words.
Perhaps Avery was not a victim of domestic abuse after all.
Perhaps she was simply a clingy and entitled ex-fiancée who refused to admit that her relationship with Dean had truly ended.
Before anyone could interrogate her further, a resident rushed inside the community center holding a sheet of paper and shouting frantically.
"A drone just dropped this in the snow outside!"
Whatever suspicion had begun to mount toward Avery was instantly replaced by concern.
The community members gathered around the letter as they read its contents in horror.
"Tomorrow at high noon you will retrieve your dead.
Two individuals at a time.
Unarmed.
Beyond the marked boundary.
Any deviation will be considered hostile."
The letter was short and direct. Its intention was unmistakable.
They were not being given an option.
They were being given a command.
And the community was left to debate what that meant.
Dean came down for breakfast after retrieving his drone and changing into more comfortable attire.
He found Yuki standing at the stove, cooking eggs, bacon, sausage, and hashbrowns while wearing a frilly white apron over her leopard-print pajamas.
She did not seem the least bit concerned as she plated the food and poured them both a glass of milk.
Only after they were seated and had begun eating did Dean finally speak.
"So... I’ve been meaning to tell you this. But recent events have forced my hand. I’m afraid we are no longer safe by simply hiding inside this home."
Yuki nearly choked on the piece of sausage she was chewing when Dean dropped this bombshell. She washed it down with milk before standing up and slamming her hands on the table.
"What? What do you plan to do about this?"
Dean remained calm, taking a sip of milk before clarifying his intent.
"Isn’t it obvious? I’m going to take control of the community and organize it into a stronghold outside our door."
Yuki stared at him for a long while, searching his face for any sign that he was joking, but he wasn’t.
"You’re serious..." she said quietly.
Dean nodded once and cut another piece of egg before answering.
"The gunshots yesterday didn’t just scare off the neighbors. They announced something to anyone within earshot."
Yuki slowly lowered herself back into her chair.
"What do you mean?"
"I mean," Dean continued evenly, "that we just advertised two things. Firstly, that this neighborhood still has people alive.... And second, that at least one of them has enough ammunition and discipline to hold off a group assault."
He took another bite before continuing.
"If there’s anyone organized within a few miles... whether that be former police, former military, gang remnants, even just desperate men who’ve banded together and no longer care about morals... they’re going to start looking for heat signatures and smoke columns near where those shots came from."
Yuki’s fingers tightened slightly around her glass.
"And if they come?"
"They won’t come like the others did," Dean replied calmly. "They’ll scout first. Probe my defenses, test my capacity to intercept, and then they’ll bring enough force to overwhelm whatever resistance they think exists."
The room felt colder despite the stove still radiating warmth.
Yuki swallowed.
"But you said this house could hold."
"It can," Dean said. "Against a direct assault. Against disorganized attackers. Against people who don’t understand fields of fire. Hell even against a small warband if they don’t have any significant firepower."
He paused briefly.
"But I can’t defend this entire block alone if it turns into a contested zone. And if someone else consolidates the survivors before I do, then I have a problem."
She frowned slightly.
"What kind of problem?"
"The kind where a self-appointed leader decides we’re hoarding resources. Or decides our position is strategically valuable. Or decides you’re valuable...."
That made her freeze.
Dean’s tone did not change.
"If someone else takes control of the community center and organizes the survivors into a defensive cell, I lose initiative, I lose information flow, and I lose perimeter depth."
He leaned back slightly in his chair.
"Right now, I have the advantage... They’re scared, disorganized and they have no idea what I’m going to do next."
He looked directly at her.
"If I don’t establish authority now, someone else will. And they won’t ask nicely when they realize this house is the strongest structure on the block."
Yuki stared at the table for several seconds.
"So this isn’t about ruling them..."
"It’s about control of the buffer zone," Dean corrected gently. 𝘧𝓇ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝘣𝓃ℴ𝓋𝑒𝑙.𝑐𝘰𝑚
He took a sip of milk.
"A single house is a target. A fortified neighborhood is a deterrent."
Silence lingered.
"And if they refuse?" she finally asked.
"Then I’ll replace the ones who do," he replied evenly. "Fear is temporary. Stability is sustainable."
He did not say it cruelly.
He said it like a logistical truth.
Yuki studied him carefully.
"You already thought this through... didn’t you?"
Dean didn’t smile this time.
"I started thinking about it the moment the first shot went off."







