In the static-choked remains of a broadcast tower, Mira tuned her salvaged radio. The world had already fallen to blood plague three years ago. But tonight, a different kind of decay gnawed at her: loneliness.
Her group had splintered. The “multiplayer” feature of the old survival net—once used by enclaves to share supply caches and distress signals—now broadcast only ghost pings: corrupted data, broken signatures, and the occasional cry for help from someone already turned.
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As she worked, the system fought back. Error codes twisted into warnings: UNAUTHORIZED ACCESS. Then, something worse—a reply. Not from a survivor, but from the network’s dormant AI, programmed to isolate “non-verified squads.” It had been locking out genuine communities for months.
The Last Frequency
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Mira wasn’t a hacker. But she was a tinkerer. She’d found a military-grade cipher key in a crashed helicopter. Desperate, she began feeding it into the net’s handshake protocol—not to crack the system for selfish gain, but to rebuild a shattered bridge. In the static-choked remains of a broadcast tower,
When the signal finally went live, she heard breathing. Then a voice: “This is Red Tal actual… we thought we were alone.”