Weapon System in Zombie Apocalypse

Chapter 248: Bastions



17 Days Since First Strike — MOA Complex, Central Command

The lights flickered across the main strategy room as the war map updated—zones once marked in blood-red now gleamed with soft green overlays. Clark, Lucena, Calamba, and San Fernando each pulsed with activity lines, coded with tags like "Water Stabilized," "Reconstruction Ongoing," and "Population Transit Approved."

Thomas stood at the central console with arms crossed. Around him, engineers, logisticians, and civilians bustled in organized chaos. It felt… alive. Not just survival—but growth.

Dr. Evelyn Sato tapped her datapad, casting a 3D layout above the table. It showed a modular urban zone, designed like a grid with soft curves and a ring road network.

"This is Phoenix Sector-1," she said. "Designed to fit within Lucena's least-irradiated district. We'll start with seventy-two housing units, three vertical farm towers, one medical node, and a compact education zone."

Phillip whistled. "All that in a single looped layout?"

"Self-contained," she confirmed. "Solar canopy above the main avenue. Underground greywater recycling. Each block has a community armory and lockdown protocol in case of renewed Bloom activity."

Thomas nodded once. "You've planned for defense."

"We build in layers," Sato replied. "Housing, then food, then trade. But we defend all three."

Dr. Keplar joined them, still in his upgraded radiation-rated lab coat. "The soil samples are consistent. Lucena's wind patterns kept deposition minimal. You're safe to excavate, lay foundation, and operate machinery with no hazard suits needed."

Thomas glanced across the room and issued his command. "Deploy Team Atlas to Lucena. I want the first structures grounded by nightfall."

18 Days Since First Strike — Clark Zone Logistics Yard

The once-ruined airbase now throbbed with mechanical life. Clark had become the beating heart of Overwatch's supply lines. Dozens of tracked haulers came and went through makeshift customs lanes. A temporary rail loop was restored and connected to southern nodes by automated cargo rail.

Steel trusses, copper cabling, food containers, and construction polymers were stacked in shipping towers. Above it all, a high-frequency drone station coordinated incoming flights.

Thomas toured the site with Marcus, who pointed toward a towering steel scaffolding being raised in the center of the yard.

"That's the Clarke Spire," Marcus said. "Fifty meters tall. Command and radar post. It'll serve as our main trans-Luzon broadcast hub."

"How's fuel holding up?" Thomas asked.

"Diesel's tight," Marcus admitted. "But we're converting the base's old hangars into algae biofuel distilleries. Keplar's team says we'll be 40% self-sufficient within the month."

"Good," Thomas replied. "This city's not just a yard. It's the spine. If Clark breaks, the rest fall behind."

He looked to the east, where civilian tents were rising beside machine yards. Former refugees—now workers. For the first time in months, many of them had jobs again.

19 Days Since First Strike — San Fernando

The reconstruction team had renamed it "Fort Renewal."

Concrete mixers worked overtime under floodlights. Tower cranes rotated in sequence, dropping prefabricated walls into place. Roads had been swept and re-laid with compacted stonecrete, making them walkable. Children kicked a soccer ball around the edge of a cleared boulevard, their laughter echoing between half-built shelters.

Inside the church ruins, Thomas stood behind a repurposed pulpit. Before him sat over 200 civilians—former evacuees, construction volunteers, and early settlers. This wasn't a press conference. It was the first "citizen assembly" of a reclaimed city.

A woman with a clipboard stood up. "Mr. Estaris—what happens if the Bloom comes back?"

Thomas didn't sugarcoat. "Then we fight it again. But this time, from walls. With protocols. With order. We won't be caught sleeping again."

A man near the back raised his hand. "And food? Water? What about our kids?"

Thomas turned to the wall behind him where a cloth banner now hung, printed hastily but bold:

"From Ashes, Order. From Fire, Life."

"We're not building camps," Thomas said. "We're building cities. Cities that feed their people, treat their sick, and protect their future. We'll stumble. But we will rise."

20 Days Since First Strike — Lucena Core

At sunrise, the first vertical farm was completed.

Its white shell glimmered in the ocean breeze. Inside, LED growth trays were already humming. Automated mist sprayers deployed nutrients into stacked beds of kale, beans, and cabbage. The tower could feed five hundred mouths per week. Four more were planned within the month.

Sato surveyed the site proudly. "This is how we avoid dependency," she said. "No convoys. No ration drops. Just engineered ecosystems."

Beside the farm stood a half-built trade plaza. Open modular stalls, shade cloths, and a planned open-air auction space. Phillip was inspecting the layouts.

"Market days," he said, almost in disbelief. "Like it's 2019 again."

"We need culture as much as calories," Sato replied. "If all we offer is survival, people won't stay. But if we offer them a life… they'll fight for it."

Thomas watched a child holding a plastic broom sweep an already-clean street. He said nothing—but the corners of his mouth twitched slightly.

21 Days Since First Strike — MOA Complex

Back in the nerve center, Thomas reviewed updated projections.

Overwatch's data streams showed stabilized biosigns. No new hives. No Goliath-class readings. Drone strikes now confirmed the Bloom was not reforming in the glassed zones.

"Population density at San Fernando: 1,100. Clark: 840. Calamba: 520. Lucena: 1,700," Marcus reported.

Thomas stared at the numbers. "We're spreading thin. Risk of reinfection rises if we can't coordinate faster."

Dr. Sato spoke up. "That's why we begin grid planning. Transit lines. Unified ID systems. Radio relay towers. If these are cities, they need to talk to each other."

Keplar added, "And they'll need governance eventually. Law, patrols, dispute systems."

Thomas frowned. "And who's going to run those?"

Silence followed.

Then Phillip shrugged. "You've already got people treating you like a president. Might as well start acting like one."

Thomas ignored the joke. "No crowns. No parades. We're building merit. Not monarchy."

He turned back to the screen. New alerts flashed—dozens of civilian groups inquiring about joining reclamation efforts. Thomas opened the channel and sent a blanket message:

"Overwatch is now accepting skilled laborers, teachers, engineers, and medics. Priority to families. Our cities are growing. Join us in the rebuilding of the world."

22 Days Since First Strike — Lucena Rooftop

The night was calm.

Wind rustled through the still-bare rooftops of Lucena's growing skyline. The stars above were clearer than they had been in years—no light pollution. No global noise.

Thomas stood alone on a scaffold above Phoenix Sector-1. Below him, hundreds of lights twinkled. Quiet laughter drifted upward from the plaza where families gathered around campfires, some cooking. Some just sharing stories.

Keplar joined him with a data tablet. "You should get sleep."

"Later."

"They'll be ready for more tomorrow. Tuguegarao. Iligan. Baguio. Everyone wants a city now."

Thomas didn't look away from the lights. "Then we'll give them cities."

He took a deep breath, the first one that didn't taste like smoke or ash.

And for the first time in a long time, he allowed himself a moment of silence.

Not dread.

Not pressure.

Just… silence.

And in that silence, the world started again.


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