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Apocalypse: King of Zombies-Chapter 447: There’s still hope!
Chapter 447: There’s still hope!
“Gulp gulp gulp gulp gulp!”
Inside a storage warehouse in the heart of San Diego, Sean was chugging a bottle of juice like a man dying of thirst.
“Ahhh… damn, that’s sweet,” he smacked his lips, looking totally satisfied. The juice had a shelf life of two and a half years—still good.
Next to him, Chris squinted at the ingredients list.
“With a shelf life that long, I’d bet 90% of this stuff is just chemicals.”
“Then I’ll take the hit for you,” Sean said, snatching the bottle from Chris’s hand.
Behind them, Brandon, Griffin, and Chloe were hauling crates of supplies, busy with the heavy lifting.
“Hey, Sean! Get your ass over here and help. Quit slacking off.”
“Alright, alright, I’m coming!” Sean replied cheerfully. He took a couple steps forward—then suddenly stopped, clamping his thighs together and squirming.
Chloe raised an eyebrow. “What now?”
“I gotta pee.”
“…” Chloe stared at him, speechless. Of course. It’s always something with this guy… If it’s not taking a dump, it’s taking a leak…
“Don’t touch my juice while I’m gone,” Sean warned, setting two bottles on top of a crate before heading out of the warehouse.
He stepped into the ruined streets of the post-apocalyptic city. Buildings were half-collapsed, cracks spiderwebbed across the pavement, and moss had taken over everything.
Bathrooms were a thing of the past. In the apocalypse, you just went wherever.
Sean figured the middle of the street was as good a place as any.
“Huh? What the hell is this?”
He looked down and noticed a web of blood trails crisscrossing the road—dense, intricate, forming strange patterns that stretched far into the distance.
Curious, Sean took a few steps forward, trying to see where they led, but the end was nowhere in sight.
“Nope, can’t hold it… I’m gonna piss myself if I wait any longer.”
The juice had hit him hard. Desperate, he stopped right in the middle of the blood-marked street, unzipped, and let loose.
“Let me add a few lines to your masterpiece.”
Psssshhhhhhhhh…
Sean unleashed a full-blown stream, swaying side to side like he was pressure-washing the pavement.
As the pressure in his bladder eased, he let out a satisfied sigh. When he was finally done, he gave a little shake and shivered from the release.
“Whew… that hit the spot.”
He zipped up, but the blood patterns beneath his feet had changed. The urine had muddied the lines, breaking some of the connections and smudging the once-clear symbols. The whole thing looked different now.
Sean, completely unaware of what he’d just done, strolled back toward the warehouse, already thinking about cracking open another couple bottles of juice.
But then—
The ground trembled.
A chorus of chaotic footsteps echoed through the streets. In the distance, the guttural roars of zombies and the snarls of rabid dogs rang out. A massive horde was stampeding back into the city—and they were in a hurry.
“They’re back?” Sean muttered, recognizing the Rabies Zombies from the San Diego hive.
Leading the charge was none other than the Zombie King himself—Nightbane, the undisputed ruler of San Diego.
Only… he didn’t look like a ruler right now. He looked panicked.
He’d just used the last of his psychic energy to create an illusion and trick Ethan. Now he was running on fumes.
“Move! Move, damn it!”
Nightbane barreled down the street with his horde, racing toward the heart of the hive. Urgency radiated off him.
If he’d been at full strength, he would’ve sensed Sean standing right there. But drained and desperate, he blew right past him without even noticing.
“What the hell’s going on here?” Sean muttered, his “genius” gaze sweeping over the scene. He couldn’t make heads or tails of it.
But after a second, he just shook his head and shrugged it off.
“Whatever. I’ll figure it out later. Juice first.”
…
Meanwhile, Nightbane had pulled off one last trick—an illusion to throw Ethan off—and now he and his crew were retreating back into the city.
There was no denying Ethan’s power. Nightbane knew he couldn’t beat him in a straight fight. But as the king of this territory, he wasn’t about to roll over and die.
His last card to play was the Ritual Array hidden in the city’s core.
He’d drawn it himself, line by line, based on strange radio signals picked up from deep space. The only catch? It needed two Radiant Crystals to activate. And now, finally, he had both.
The signal that guided him—only zombies could understand it—called the Ritual Array the Celestial Gate.
Once activated, it promised unimaginable power.
Nightbane didn’t know exactly how strong it would make him, but judging by the message, it was enough to dominate the entire planet.
He wasn’t totally convinced, but if a signal could reach Earth from that far out, it had to come from a higher civilization. It wasn’t just some random noise.
Worst case? He’d at least be strong enough to go toe-to-toe with the Zombie King of Los Angeles.
“Once I activate the Ritual Array, everything changes,” Nightbane muttered.
“Boss, go! We’ll hold them off with our lives!” shouted Daisy, another Zombie King, her voice fierce and resolute.
Nightbane gave a sharp nod. “Good!” He picked up speed, racing toward the heart of the hive.
Daisy skidded to a stop, turning to face the street they’d just come from. Her elite squad, battered and bloodied, followed her lead.
Behind them, the roars of battle echoed—L.A.’s zombie horde had caught up.
They moved like predators, fast and brutal, pouncing on San Diego’s defenders and tearing them apart with savage bites.
Overhead, Hellhound streaked through the sky, his body covered in gashes. He was wounded, but still airborne, still dangerous. His nose twitched mid-flight.
“Huh? That smell… why does it seem familiar?”
“Hellhound! Snap out of it!” Daisy shouted. “They’re right behind us—we’ve gotta buy the boss more time!”
“Right! Got it!” Hellhound turned his head just in time to see a massive swarm of crows rising on the horizon, dark as a thundercloud, sweeping toward the city.
Beneath the birds, the full force of the L.A. zombie horde surged forward like a tidal wave, howling and snarling as they flooded into San Diego.
The ground shook with their arrival. The air was thick with death.
Daisy’s face hardened. “Hold the line!”
The remaining San Diego zombies stopped retreating. They turned, dug in, and prepared for a final stand.
The two zombie hordes clashed again in a brutal melee.
But the outcome was clear from the start—San Diego’s forces were shattered, barely holding together. Against L.A.’s overwhelming numbers, they were being torn apart.
Daisy’s eyes darted toward the center of the hive. There, a faint glow was rising—soft, shimmering, and strange. A pulse of energy rippled through the air.
“The Ritual Array… is it activating?”
“There’s still hope!” she whispered, gritting her teeth. She threw everything she had into one last push. With a wave of her hand, the pink flowers that grew inside the hive suddenly exploded into bloom, spreading like wildfire.
They climbed up buildings, spilled across the streets, blooming everywhere.
Up ahead, Hellhound fought like a demon. His mutated bones deflected blows from the enemy Zombie King, and when things got too hot, he spread his skeletal wings and shot into the sky.
Both Zombie Kings were giving it everything they had—buying time for the Ritual Array to come online.
Meanwhile… on a nearby rooftop.
A few human figures had appeared—Sean, Chris, and the rest of their crew. Mia and Robert had just joined them after regrouping.
They’d heard the chaos and stopped scavenging to check it out.
“Dude… how the hell did the fight end up all the way over here?”
“No clue, man…”
“Great. Now I’m behind on my juice run.”
“…”
Sean crossed his arms, sulking, eyes scanning the sky—until he spotted a familiar figure darting through the air.
“Wait a sec… isn’t that the flying mutt that tried to bite me?”
…