Harem Apocalypse: My Seed is the Cure?!

Chapter 153: The Scream [18]



A suffocating silence fell over the ruined house like a burial shroud. Every pair of eyes in the room locked onto Jason's figure standing in the destroyed entrance.

The shock of his sudden appearance rendered everyone momentarily speechless, frozen in tableau like actors who'd forgotten their lines. Jason should have been at the Municipal Office—evacuating with the other survivors, coordinating defenses, doing literally anything except standing here in their doorway wearing that wrong, terribly wrong expression on his familiar face.

Christopher was the first to recover from the initial shock, his natural optimism and friendly nature overriding the instinctive warning bells that were starting to ring in the back of his mind. A relieved smile spread across his face as he took an automatic step forward, lowering his bloodied crowbar slightly in a gesture of welcome.

"Jason! Man, what are you doing here?" Christopher asked a bit puzzled. His eyes traveled up and down his friend's form, noting details that seemed increasingly strange the longer he looked. "And why aren't you wearing anything on top? Did you get attacked? Are you hurt?"

Jason stood bare-chested, his torso exposed to the night air. His skin glistened with what could have been sweat or something else entirely—something that caught the light strangely, making it look almost luminescent in places.

"Wait, Christopher!" Cindy moved quickly, grabbing Christopher's arm with surprising strength to prevent him from approaching any closer. "Don't—"

"Cindy?" Christopher looked at her with bewilderment, unable to understand why she was stopping him. "What's wrong? It's just Jason—"

But Cindy wasn't looking at him. Her gaze was locked on Jason's chest with laser focus, her face pale beneath the soot and ash, every muscle in her body tensed like a bowstring pulled to its breaking point. "Look at his chest," she said. "Look at what's embedded there."

Christopher followed her gaze, and his eyes widened with dawning horror as he finally saw it.

Elena had already noticed, her exhaustion momentarily forgotten as she forced herself to stand despite her trembling legs. The Dullahan virus hummed weakly in her system, depleted but still functional enough to enhance her senses and allow her to see details that might have escaped a normal human's notice.

Embedded directly in the center of Jason's chest—positioned roughly where his heart should be—was a stone. Not just any stone, but one that pulsed with an eerie, otherworldly silver light that seemed to emanate from deep within its crystalline structure. The stone was roughly the size of a human fist, its surface smooth and almost organic-looking, with veins of brighter luminescence running through it like frozen lightning. The edges where it met Jason's flesh were seamless, as if the stone had grown there naturally or been surgically implanted with impossible precision.

The silver glow pulsed in rhythm with Jason's breathing—or what passed for breathing—casting strange shadows across his bare torso and making his skin look corpse-pale in its reflected light.

They recognized that stone. Or more accurately, they recognized what it represented.

"What's that stone doing embedded in your chest, Jason?" Cindy asked, her voice carefully controlled despite the fear coursing through her veins. Her hand tightened around her steel pipe, knuckles white with tension.

Christopher's expression had shifted from confusion to dawning horror as the pieces fell into place. He'd seen stones like that before—twice, in fact. His gaze remained fixed on the pulsing silver crystal, unable to look away despite the wrongness of it making his skin crawl.

He recognized it as similar—disturbingly, impossibly similar—to the two core stones that Ryan had recovered from the Fire Spitter and Frost Walker after their brutal battles. Those alien technologies, those nightmare weapons of destruction, had each possessed such a stone at the center of their being. Ryan had theorized they functioned as some kind of power source or control mechanism, though no one fully understood their true purpose.

And now Jason had one. Embedded in his chest. Glowing with that same alien light.

Jason's smile widened into something that was no longer remotely human, revealing teeth that seemed too white, too perfect, too sharp in the flickering firelight. His hand moved with slowness, fingers trailing across the surface of the embedded stone almost lovingly, caressing it like one might stroke a precious gem.

"Oh, this?" His voice carried a quality it had never possessed before—something layered and resonant, as if multiple voices were speaking in perfect synchronization just slightly out of phase with each other. "Just something cool I picked up."

Then, without any further warning, Jason's mouth opened wider than should have been physically possible, his jaw unhinging like a snake's, and he released a splitting scream that tore through the air like a physical weapon.

The sound was beyond description—not merely loud, but wrong on a fundamental level that bypassed the ears and struck directly at the brain stem, at the primitive lizard portion of the human mind that remembered when humanity was prey. It carried harmonics that shouldn't exist in nature, frequencies that made teeth ache and bones vibrate in their sockets, undertones that triggered instant, overwhelming panic.

Everyone's hands flew to their ears in a desperate, futile attempt to block out the assault. The sound penetrated flesh and bone, reverberating through their skulls until it felt like their brains might liquefy and pour out through their noses.

Cindy and Elena, with their Dullahan-enhanced constitutions, managed slightly better than the others. They remained upright, though both grimaced in obvious pain, their enhanced healing factors already working to repair the minor damage the sonic assault was inflicting on their eardrums and inner ear structures. But their advantages were marginal at best—they could withstand the scream, but they certainly couldn't ignore it.

The others without any supernatural protection suffered far worse. Christopher, Alisha, and Liu Mei all staggered, their hands clamped over their ears hard enough to leave bruises, faces contorted in agony. Blood began trickling from Christopher's nose, and Alisha's knees buckled slightly before she caught herself on the stair railing.

When the scream finally ended—after what felt like an eternity but was probably only five or six seconds—the silence that followed was somehow even more oppressive than before. Ears rang with phantom echoes, and several people were still shaking their heads trying to clear the residual effects.

Elena's mind was racing, connecting dots with horrifying clarity despite her exhaustion and the lingering pain in her skull. The scream. Just like the Screamer—the alien weapon-creature that Ryan had warned them about, the one that could summon hordes of infected with its calls, the one they'd been preparing to face before everything went to hell.

The Fire Spitter and Frost Walker had both possessed those strange core stones—crystalline hearts that seemed to be the source of their power and the key to their existence. Ryan had removed those stones after defeating the creatures, effectively killing them by extracting what amounted to their alien hearts.

So what if—and the thought made Elena's blood run cold—what if the silver stone embedded in Jason's chest was actually the Screamer's core? What if Jason had somehow acquired the alien creature's power source and integrated it into his own body?

It sounded like something straight out of science fiction, the kind of body-horror concept that would have seemed absurd just months ago. But after everything they'd experienced—the Dullahan virus, the Enhanced Infected, the alien technologies—nothing seemed too outlandish anymore. And it would certainly explain how Jason could produce those devastating screams that were the Screamer's signature weapon.

Jason took a slow step into the house, his bare feet leaving faint, luminescent footprints on the ash-covered floor that glowed briefly before fading. His eyes swept across the ruined interior, taking in the burning support beams, the collapsed furniture, the blood and debris scattered everywhere with an expression of mild disapproval.

"The house is in quite a battered state since the day I left," he observed conversationally. His gaze moved across the assembled survivors, counting silently. "I don't see everyone here. Where are Rachel, Sydney, Daisy, and Rebecca?"

"J-Jason..." Christopher managed to speak despite the pain still echoing through his skull, his voice rough and strained. He was staring at his former friend with an expression caught between grief and horror, still desperately trying to reconcile the person he'd known with this thing wearing Jason's face. "W…What happened to you? What did they do to you?"

Jason's lips curved into something that might have been a smile on a human face but looked wrong, predatory, on his. "I have nothing against you, Christopher," he said, and there was almost a note of genuine regret in his layered voice. "This was never about you. It was only ever about Ryan. But now..." He paused, that terrible smile widening. "Now he's done."

Everyone's eyes widened with shock and denial, the implications of what Jason had just said crashing over them like a tidal wave of ice water.

"N…No..." Elena shook her head violently, backing up a step. "No, that's not—you're lying—"

Jason's expression shifted to something that might have been amusement or satisfaction or both. "He came rushing back to help, just like I knew he would. Like the predictable hero he thinks he is." His voice dripped with contempt that was all the more chilling for how casual it sounded. "Brought Jasmine with him too, thinking they could 'save' me from the infected. How noble. How stupid."

He gestured toward the darkness beyond the destroyed entrance with a theatrical flourish. "But poor Ryan fell right into the trap. And poor Jasmine..." His smile became almost gleeful. "Well, she got caught in it too."

As if on cue, a figure stumbled into view from the smoke-filled night, moving with that distinctive lurching gait that could only mean one thing.

Everyone's attention snapped to the newcomer, and what they saw froze the blood in their veins.

An infected staggered up beside Jason, its movements uncoordinated but purposeful, drawn by some signal or command that only it could perceive. But this wasn't just any infected—its features, despite the grotesque transformation that had overtaken them, were still horrifyingly recognizable.

The skin had taken on that characteristic grayish pallor of the infected, mottled with darker patches where blood had pooled beneath the surface. The eyes—once bright and intelligent and warm—were now clouded with milky white cataracts that seemed to glow faintly in the darkness.

But despite all those horrific changes, despite the transformation from human to monster, they couldn't mistake that face. The bone structure, the shape of the features, the way the hair fell—all of it was undeniably her.

Jasmine.

"Ja-Jasmine..." The name escaped Cindy's lips as barely a whisper, broken and raw with grief. Tears gathered immediately in the corners of her eyes, blurring her vision as she stared at what had become of their friend. Her hand flew to her mouth as if to physically prevent the sob that was building in her chest from escaping.

The others were struck speechless with horror, their minds struggling to process what they were seeing. The shock of seeing someone they'd known, someone they'd befriended and worked alongside, someone who'd been vibrant and alive just days, hours ago—now reduced to this shambling mockery of humanity—was almost beyond their capacity to comprehend.

It was one thing to fight infected strangers, faceless former humans whose identities had been lost to time and transformation. It was an entirely different horror to see someone you knew, someone you'd shared meals with and laughed with and trusted, turned into a monster.

Christopher's face had gone pale, his jaw clenched so tight that muscles stood out in sharp relief along his neck. His hands trembled around the crowbar, and for a moment it looked like he might drop it entirely.

"What happened to you?" The question came out strangled, directed at Jason but encompassing everything—the stone, the screams, the betrayal, Jasmine's transformation, all of it. "What the hell happened to you?!"

Jason's hand moved to touch the silver stone embedded in his chest once more, fingers trailing across its smooth surface with what looked almost like affection. The stone pulsed brighter under his touch, responding to him in a way that suggested an intimate connection between flesh and alien crystal.

"I just woke up from a nightmare," Jason said. "I was weak before. Pathetic. Following Ryan around like a lost puppy, always in his shadow, never good enough." His expression hardened. "But not anymore. Now I'm strong. Now I have power. Now I matter."

"Where is he?" Cindy's voice cut through Jason's monologue, sharp despite the tears still streaming down her face. Her grief was rapidly transmuting into something else—something harder and more dangerous. "Where is Ryan?"

Jason's smile returned, broader and more terrible than before. He seemed to savor the moment, drawing it out deliberately, feeding on their fear and anguish like a parasite feeding on its host.

"Oh, Ryan's alive," he said. "For now, anyway. He was crying and thrashing around quite dramatically when I last saw him, screaming threats and promises like he could actually do something about his situation." Jason laughed—a sound that held no warmth whatsoever. "But now he's safely surrounded by infected. Dozens of them, maybe hundreds. All waiting patiently for the real collectors to arrive."

His eyes glittered with malicious satisfaction. "Once they extract the Dullahan from him—once they rip it out of his body and take what they came for—he'll be killed. Discarded like the worthless husk he'll become without his precious power."

"N-No..." Elena took an instinctive step forward, her body moving before her mind could catch up, driven by a desperate need to do something, anything to prevent the nightmare Jason was describing. But the moment she put weight on her leading foot, her leg buckled beneath her.

She crashed to her knees hard enough to send jolts of pain shooting up through her thighs, but that physical discomfort was nothing compared to the crushing weakness that overwhelmed her entire system. The Dullahan energy she'd expended fighting the Enhanced Infected had left her reserves completely depleted, running on fumes and willpower alone. And now, with Jason's devastating scream having rattled her already exhausted body, she had nothing left.

Her vision swam, black spots dancing at the edges as her body screamed for rest, for recovery, for time she didn't have. Elena tried to push herself back up, but her arms trembled and gave out, leaving her kneeling on the destroyed floor, helpless and broken while somewhere out in the darkness, Ryan was fighting for his life.

Or perhaps not even fighting anymore.

Alisha struggled as she joined Elena to help her.

Jason looked down at her with something that might have been pity in a different context, but in his transformed state read only as contempt. "You can't save him, Elena. None of you can. It's already over."

The words fell like hammer blows, final and absolute, crushing what little hope remained in the smoke-filled ruins of their home.

Then, cutting through the oppressive silence like a knife through fabric, something rang out from beyond the house.

At first, it was distant—a strident, piercing sound that seemed to come from nowhere and everywhere simultaneously. The noise was harsh and mechanical, utterly unlike any natural sound, carrying an artificial quality that immediately set it apart from the infected's groans or even Jason's alien screams.

But as the sound propagated outward, spreading across Jackson Township like ripples across a pond, it became clearer. Louder. More defined. The initial single tone multiplied, overlapping with itself as similar sounds erupted from multiple locations across the town—north, south, east, west, creating a discordant symphony of synthetic wailing that filled the night air.

"What?" Jason's expression shifted from smug satisfaction to confusion, then rapidly escalated to something approaching genuine shock. His head whipped around, trying to locate the source of the sounds that were now assaulting his enhanced hearing from every direction. "What is this?"

The artificial screams—because that's what they were, Elena realized through her exhausted haze—resembled Jason's sonic attacks but were distinctly different. They lacked the bone-deep wrongness of the Screamer's natural cry, the biological component that triggered primal terror in the human brain. These were technological approximations, recordings or synthesized versions that mimicked the frequency and amplitude without carrying the same visceral horror.

But they were loud. Impossibly loud. The sounds rang everywhere throughout the city, echoing off buildings and bouncing through empty streets, creating a cacophony that would be audible for miles in every direction.

Christopher's face, which had been twisted in pain and grief just moments before, suddenly split into a wide, genuine grin. He laughed—actually laughed—despite the agony still reverberating through his skull from Jason's earlier attack. The sound started as a chuckle but quickly built into full-throated laughter that was equal parts relief and vindictive satisfaction.

"Haha!" Christopher's laugh carried across the ruined house, breaking through the shock that had paralyzed everyone else. "Looks like Ryan will always be ahead of you—be it in love or intelligence, you dumbass!"

Jason's head snapped toward Christopher, confusion giving way to anger in his alien eyes.

In that moment of distraction, while Jason's attention was divided between the mysterious sounds and Christopher's mocking laughter, Christopher moved. His body was already in motion before conscious thought could catch up, fueled by grief for Jasmine, rage at Jason's betrayal, and the desperate need to do something—anything—to fight back against the nightmare their friend had become.

The crowbar in Christopher's hands whistled through the air in a vicious arc, driven by every ounce of strength his exhausted muscles could muster. The metal connected with Jason's temple with a sickening CRACK that echoed through the house like a gunshot.

Jason's head snapped violently to the side from the impact, his entire body following the momentum of the blow. Blood—shockingly red and normal-looking despite everything else about him that had become alien—sprayed from the gash that opened along his scalp, spattering across the burned floorboards in a dramatic arc.

Everyone watching fell into shocked silence, frozen by what they'd just witnessed.

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