Chapter 1282: Story 1282: Land of Rust
Axen's eyes were dull silver now—reflective, inhuman. But there was still recognition in them.
"Juno," he rasped, voice thick with static. "You made it to the edge."
Juno took a slow step forward, torn between relief and unease. The man in front of her had once been her comrade, a brilliant scavenger with a half-serious laugh and a knack for surviving the impossible. But now… he was something else.
Behind him, more figures emerged—his people. They were known as the Rustborn, survivors twisted by years of exposure to viral storms, nanite decay, and biofeedback tech from failed VIREX fields. They bore the infection like a second skin, yet they hadn't turned. Not fully.
Axen turned, gesturing for them to follow. "You've seen the Hollow. Now come see the Heart."
They crossed into what the Rustborn called the Land of Rust—a desolate industrial wasteland built on the bones of collapsed factories, armored transport wrecks, and forgotten robotics labs. Everything gleamed with oxidation—copper, blood, and time.
Shade leaned close to Juno. "He's not the same."
"I know," she murmured. "But he still remembers us. That's more than most."
H-13's sensors pinged faint electromagnetic anomalies everywhere. "Caution. This entire area is alive with dormant AI residue. Early drone mines. Prototype defense clusters. Improvised fusion traps."
As if on cue, a mechanical clunk sounded nearby—an old V-19 war walker, half buried in a slagheap, lifted its head to scan them. But at Axen's gesture, it powered back down.
"They obey now," he explained. "We reprogrammed what VIREX left behind. The land serves us."
They arrived at a high platform built from aircraft wings and train car husks. From here, the Rustborn watched the horizon. In the far distance, a crater glowed faint blue—a place Axen called the Signal Pit.
"It's where they tried to restart the virus," he said. "A last-ditch control beacon. The pulse failed—but it corrupted everything."
Juno stepped closer. "That's where the Genesis Vault was supposed to broadcast, right? To reboot the world."
Axen nodded. "And it still can. But not without a stabilizer. That's why they sent you."
Shade frowned. "You mean Juno's the kill switch?"
"No," Axen said softly. "She's the reset key. And the last pure thread the virus can't rewrite."
Suddenly, klaxons blared across the Rustborn camp. One of the lookouts screamed down from the tower:
"Movement in the east! Metal swarm incoming!"
Juno turned sharply. "Wraiths?"
Axen's voice darkened. "Worse. The ones that forgot they were ever human. The Shepherd's spawn."
Dozens of glinting shapes poured over the rust hills—four-legged, rapid, cloaked in bone and wire.
And leading them—standing tall, faceless, crowned with antennae—was a figure Juno had only heard about in whispers.
The Zombie Shepherd.
Axen drew his weapon.
"Welcome to the Rustfront," he growled. "Now fight like hell."