Weapon System in Zombie Apocalypse-Chapter 274: Next is Taiwan

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Chapter 274: Next is Taiwan

The island nation of Taiwan lay draped in morning mist, its mountains slicing through the haze like silent sentinels. From above, the once-bustling cities of Taipei and Kaohsiung looked frozen in time—untouched by bombs, but not spared by silence.

Drone Harpy-Seven skimmed low over the capital. Roads were clear of wreckage but covered in green vines, buildings intact but hollow. No signs of biomass blooms. No signs of life. Just quiet.

Rebecca stared at the multispectral feed from the command room of Overwatch’s mobile carrier Vigilant Dawn, anchored off Taiwan’s eastern coast.

"No ambient spore levels," she murmured. "Thermals show minor power draws. Some structures might still have grid backup."

Thomas Estaris entered behind her, fastening his vest. "Ghost cities."

"No blast damage. No biomass clusters. It’s... eerie."

Thomas leaned over the console. "Are we sure this wasn’t just bypassed?"

Casimiro, patching in from MOA, answered. "The terrain likely played a role. High elevation. Narrow coastline. The biomass probably couldn’t spread effectively. We’re looking at a near-zero contamination zone."

Rebecca looked up. "Then this could be the first real post-invasion territory."

Thomas nodded. "Then we send our best."

He turned to the deck intercom. "Deploy Shadow Team Three. Priority is assessment, communications reactivation, and search for survivors. If this island held out, I want to know how."

"Copy that," came the voice on the other end. "Shadow Three deploying."

Operation Rainwalker: Phase Three had begun.

Day 11 — 07:20 AM, Taipei Landing Zone Alpha

A gust of wind stirred trash down a long-abandoned street as the tiltrotor touched down in Taipei’s Da’an District. The Overwatch insignia glinted on its hull as Shadow Team Three emerged—twelve soldiers in sleek black exosuits designed for urban warfare.

Captain Elara Voss took point, her expression hidden behind a polarized visor. She raised one gloved hand, signaling the squad to spread out.

"Secure the block. Drones up."

Three quadcopters zipped upward, deploying lidar and thermal scans. The results streamed into their HUDs—clear. No movement. No biomass. Only residual heat in a few buildings, maybe from old solar capacitors still trickling power.

"Building ahead has a flickering heat signature," murmured tech specialist Liu. "Could be a server rack or a backup battery."

"Mark it. Move."

They advanced toward an office building once labeled "Taiwan Telecom Central Hub." Its doors had long since rusted open, but the interior was dry. Server lights blinked dimly on the third floor—evidence that something was still alive in the grid.

Inside the building, Elara stared at the blinking blue LED.

"This place should’ve gone dark months ago," she muttered.

Liu knelt beside the power conduit. "Looks like an independent solar bank on the roof. Some of these systems were automated for long-term disaster recovery. Whoever built this... planned ahead."

Elara keyed her comm. "Command, Shadow Three. We’ve got grid activity. Low-level systems are still operational. This city didn’t just survive—it stayed awake."

Thomas’s voice returned over comms. "Copy that. Begin data retrieval. If anyone broadcasted a distress beacon, I want that signal."

Day 11 — 10:30 AM, Taipei Subnet Control Center

Deep in the fiber-optic relay building, Shadow Three uncovered a treasure trove of archived data. Liu and his counterpart, Alvarez, jacked in and began decrypting sealed logs. Screens flickered to life, and a map of Taipei emerged—complete with blinking green icons and tagged structures.

"Holy shit..." Alvarez whispered. "They mapped it. The whole resistance."

Elara leaned in. "Resistance?"

"Taiwan didn’t fall. They went dark on purpose. Look at this—hidden supply depots, safehouses, encrypted comms routes. This wasn’t a collapse. This was containment."

A new alert pinged. Liu opened it—a last message dated three months ago.

"To any listening authority: We held them at the shore. We sealed the ports, mined the tunnels, and evacuated underground. We’re alive. But not for long."

There were coordinates.

Elara stood straight. "Prep for movement. We’re going underground."

Day 11 — 14:00 PM, Taipei Underground Sector 7-B

Steel doors groaned as Shadow Three entered a sub-basement beneath a metro station. The air was thick and stale, but breathable. Emergency lights flickered. Inside were rows of empty bunks, storage crates, water filtration units—abandoned, but recently so.

"People lived here," said Alvarez, brushing dust from a table.

"No bodies," Elara observed. "No signs of struggle. No infection residue."

Kale, their field medic, ran a test on the air. "Filters still running. Whoever was here left by choice."

Suddenly, motion.

From the corner of the hall, a figure darted past—small. Quick. A child.

"Contact!" shouted Private Reyes.

They gave chase, but turned the corner to find nothing. Just a plastic toy on the ground—a figure of a white phoenix.

Elara picked it up. "Overwatch symbol. They knew we were coming."

She tapped her comm. "Command, we have evidence of a subterranean survivor colony. Recently evacuated. Possible awareness of our presence."

Thomas answered instantly. "Track them. If they moved, they’re watching. Be ready for contact."

Day 11 — 18:15 PM, Mountainside Relay Bunker, Central Taiwan

Far up in the Nantou highlands, in a bunker carved into the mountain, a dozen eyes watched the Overwatch feed from a jacked satellite link. Men and women in civilian garb, faces hardened by months of fear, now stared at the familiar emblem.

A middle-aged woman stood, shoulders straight.

"Play the audio again."

The screen replayed Thomas’s voice from hours before:

"We’re not here to occupy. We’re here to reclaim and rebuild. If you are listening—Taiwan is not forgotten."

The woman turned to her people. "It’s real. Overwatch made it. The fire didn’t end them."

A younger man shook his head. "And if it’s bait?"

She replied, "Then we die answering it. But if it’s not—we get our home back."

Day 12 — 06:30 AM, FOB Dawnshore — Eastern Taiwan Coastline

Elara stood outside the newly erected field base, sipping reheated tea from a flask. A soldier jogged up to her, breathless.

"Captain—contact. A convoy. Eight individuals, unarmed, white flag flying."

She bolted upright. "Bring them in. Now."

Within minutes, a small group was escorted inside—wary, dusty, but composed.

At their head, the woman from the mountains stepped forward.

"I’m Dr. Lin Ya-hui. Former Director of National Disaster Management. We held the line here. Our underground networks—hundreds survived. We’ve stayed hidden ever since the Taipei Quarantine."

Thomas stepped into the tent moments later, his expression unreadable. The room fell quiet.

"You’re the Commander," Dr. Lin said.

Thomas nodded. "And you’re proof we were right to hope."

Day 12 — 10:00 AM, MOA Complex — War Room

Rebecca stared at the satellite feed. A new green dot blinked on the map: Taipei – Contact Established.

Casimiro exhaled with disbelief. "That’s four now. This changes everything."

Rebecca whispered, "We need more ships. More drones. Taiwan held without us. Imagine what we can do together."

Thomas’s voice rang through the speaker, direct from FOB Dawnshore.

"This isn’t just another recovery. Taiwan is a rally point. It’s where the silence ends."

The map expanded, and beyond Taiwan, new sectors pulsed red—Hong Kong. Manila’s northern corridor. Busan. Okinawa.

One by one, they would fall.

And one by one, Overwatch would rise.

Day 12 — 18:45 PM, Taipei Rooftops, Safe Zone Alpha

The sun dipped behind the western mountains, casting long shadows over the empty boulevards of Taipei. From the rooftop of a repurposed office complex now turned Overwatch outpost, Captain Elara Voss stood with Dr. Lin Ya-hui, both gazing across the skyline.

Below them, soldiers erected new comms towers. Civilians from the underground enclave moved hesitantly in the open air for the first time in months. Children shielded their eyes from the sun, unaccustomed to natural light. Some laughed. Others simply stood in stunned silence.

"You had faith," Elara said quietly, arms folded. "When so many gave up."

Dr. Lin nodded, eyes shimmering. "We had no choice but to believe. If we stopped hoping, we stopped being human."

From behind them, one of the engineers shouted, "We’ve got uplink! Direct line to MOA Command!"

Cheers erupted from the rooftop crew. Another green light blinked on the mobile terminal. Uplink secure. Taipei was officially connected.

Elara tapped her comm. "Shadow Three to Command. Communications grid restored. Civilian population estimated at 312. We’ve begun medical and supply distribution."

Thomas’s voice responded a moment later, his tone resolute. "Acknowledged. Prepare for stabilization teams. Taiwan is green."

Down in the streets, children began to chalk on sidewalks—smiling suns, stick-figure families, and the white phoenix of Overwatch. One child wrote in large, uneven Mandarin:

"We survived."

Dr. Lin smiled faintly. "No matter what happens next... we write our history from here."

Elara nodded, her gaze fixed eastward—toward the horizon, and toward the nations still shrouded in red.

"We’re not done yet."

Day 13 — 06:00 AM, MOA Complex — Observation Deck

Rebecca and Thomas stood side by side as a new batch of supply ships left port—bound for Taiwan. Medical, engineering, power infrastructure, food, and education staff filled every berth. The fleet had a new name emblazoned on its side: The Dawn Convoy.

"We’ll need ten more of those by next month," Rebecca said.

"Then we build ten more," Thomas replied.

She glanced at him. "You ever think we’d make it this far?"

He didn’t answer immediately.

Then, softly: "Every night I thought we wouldn’t. But every morning we did."

Inside the war room, the map had changed.

Red still stained the globe. But it was breaking.

Four green dots now pulsed with life: Manila. Jakarta. Bangkok. Taipei.

Next: Busan. Then Okinawa. Then the mainland.

Hope wasn’t a dream anymore. It was a strategy.

Overwatch had proven it could reclaim. Now it had to restore.

The phoenix had risen. And this time, it would not fall.