Ringkasan
The border was not just cold. It was merciless. Snow covered everything—guns, boots, even the broken metal fences that marked the edge of Neon City’s outer military zone. Victor stood in silence.
Wind cut through the valley like glass. Behind him, a young soldier struggled to keep his hands warm, rubbing them together near a weak heating unit. Sari removed her gloves for a moment, then quickly put them back on. “Temperture dropping below survival threshold,” she said. No emotion. Just fact. But the soldier beside her was shaking. Victor noticed. He took off his tactical thermal cloak without a word and threw it over the soldier. The soldier froze. “Commander… you’ll—” “Stay functional,” Victor interrupted. Silence. Only wind. Only snow. Only breath turning visible in the air. Sari looked at him. “This is unnecessary.” Victor replied: “Everything necessary has already been calculated.” A pause. Then softer: “This is not.” For a moment, nothing in the system ma
Bab1
The border wasn't just cold; it was unforgivingly harsh.
Snow covered everything: guns, boots, even the crumbling metal fences that marked the outer perimeter of the military zone around Nyon.
Victor stood silent.
The wind whipped through the valley like glass.
Behind him, a young soldier struggled to warm his hands, rubbing them together near a weak heater.
Sari briefly removed her gloves, then quickly put them back on.
"It's below the survival threshold," she said.
No emotion, just a fact.
But the soldier beside her was shivering.
Victor noticed.
Without a word, he removed his tactical thermal coat and threw it at the soldier.
The soldier froze.
"Commander... you'll..."
"Stay focused," Victor interrupted.
Silence.
Nothing but the wind.
Nothing but snow.
Nothing but breath rising into the air.
Sari looked at him.
"This is unnecessary."
Victor replied,
"Everything necessary has already been accounted for."
Silence.
Then, in a lower voice:
"This isn't it."
For a moment, nothing in the system mattered.
No project.
No framework.
No forecasting layer.
Just people standing in the freezing wind, refusing to break.
The soldier pulled his cloak tighter around him.
Warmth returned slowly.
Not enough to survive on the frontier.
But enough to keep going.
Sari looked at Victor again.
"You're jeopardizing operational efficiency."
Victor stared at the snow-covered horizon.
"Efficiency is worthless if the unit is inoperable."
A long silence.
The wind continued.
But now—
They were still moving.
- White Silence
The border military base was buried under a thick layer of snow.
White storms swept relentlessly across the mountains, swallowing the roads, walls, and frozen watchtowers surrounding the isolated compound. Slow, mechanical floodlights pierced the darkness, while the biting wind howled against the steel walls like distant sirens.
Night had fallen hours ago.
But in the northern border regions, there was no longer any difference between night and day.
Only the bitter cold remained.
Commander Victor stood alone atop Watchtower Three, overlooking the frozen valley beyond the military perimeter. Snow had accumulated on the shoulders of his black winter coat, while frost slowly coated the muzzle of the rifle resting on his gloved hands.
Below him, armored vehicles remained stationary under layers of ice.
Generators whirred incessantly.
Radio signals pierced through the storm.
Everything was tense.
Uneasy.
Suddenly, a voice pierced the static in his earpiece.
"The third patrol hasn't returned yet."
Victor didn't move immediately.
His eyes remained fixed on the mountains hidden behind the blizzard.
"How long?" he asked quietly.
"Forty minutes without contact."
Another static sound followed.
Then there was silence.
Finally, Victor turned his back to the frozen valley and descended the metal steps of the tower very slowly. The ice creaked beneath his boots as the icy wind whipped across the exposed steps.
Soldiers moved quickly across the courtyard below, carrying ammunition boxes and fuel containers through the blizzard. Some avoided looking directly at him.
Others watched him silently.
Rumors began to circulate around the base.
The patrols were missing.
Mysterious signals were appearing near the perimeter.
Footprints were being seen outside restricted areas during the night.
Victor entered the operations building without speaking to anyone.
Warm air mingled with cigarette smoke in the corridor as weary personnel worked silently beside radar stations and communications equipment. Coffee cups lay beside the flashing screens.
No one seemed to be relaxing.
At the end of the corridor, the operations room was still partially illuminated by dim radar screens.
Sari stood near the central table, reviewing satellite maps displayed on a 3D screen.
The pale blue light reflected off her face as the coded coordinates moved continuously beneath her fingertips. Her dark military coat was still partially covered in snow, a sign that she had been outside just moments before.
She looked up briefly as Victor entered.
"The storm is moving east faster than expected," she said.
Victor slowly removed his gloves.
"I know."
Sari reached for a file lying beside the screen and pulled it across the table toward him.
"The Third Patrol transmitted its last signal from the northern sector near Ridge Twelve."
Victor opened the file in silence.
Three soldiers.
A reconnaissance patrol.
Departure time: 18:40.
Contact lost: 22:13.
No distress call.
No emergency transmitter.
Nothing.
"The road was secured yesterday," a communications officer said nervously from the corner of the room. "No one should be working there."
Victor closed the file.
"But there is now."
Silence fell over the room.
Sari enlarged the terrain map on the table.
Snow-covered mountains appeared on the 3D screen, along with old military roads buried under layers of ice accumulated over the years.
"The weather is hampering thermal imaging," she explained. "Satellite visibility is constantly decreasing."
Victor studied the map carefully.
Then he pointed to an abandoned observation post near the border slopes.
"Prepare two vehicles."
One of the younger soldiers looked worried. “Commander… people are saying the patrols are disappearing near that sector.”
Victor finally looked directly at him.
The soldier immediately lowered his eyes.
“Rumors are not taken into account, only reports,” Victor said coldly.
No one said another word.
Minutes later, the convoy left the base.
Two armored military vehicles
pushed through the blizzard while headlights barely penetrated the thick white storm ahead. Snow slammed against the reinforced windows hard enough to shake the vehicles as they climbed the frozen mountain road.
Inside the lead vehicle, silence dominated the cabin.
The soldiers sat motionless beside their rifles while the sound of the engine vibrated through the metal interior.
Sari monitored the radar system from the passenger seat.
Signal interference continued increasing.
Victor sat across from her, reviewing patrol reports through a dim tactical screen attached to his wrist.
One line kept repeating across the missing patrol’s final transmission logs:
STATIC DETECTED.
Then complete silence.
The soldier nearest the rear door finally spoke quietly.
“My brother was stationed here three years ago.”
Nobody answered him.
“He said entire patrol routes were abandoned after soldiers started disappearing during storms.”
Sari looked up from the radar monitor.
“What happened to them?”
The soldier swallowed.
“They were never found.”
Victor finally spoke without lifting his eyes from the screen.
“Focus on the mission.”
The rest of the drive continued in silence.
Hours later, the convoy stopped near the last recorded signal location.
The storm outside had grown worse.
Visibility was nearly gone.
Victor stepped out first into knee-deep snow while freezing wind struck his face instantly. Soldiers followed behind him carrying flashlights and rifles as the blizzard roared across the valley.
The abandoned border sector stood somewhere ahead hidden behind snow and darkness.
Sari moved beside Victor while checking the portable tracker in her hand.
“No active military signals,” she said.
Victor scanned the terrain carefully.
Then something caught his attention near a snow-covered rock formation several meters ahead.
Dark stains across the white ground.
Blood.
Fresh.
The soldiers immediately raised their weapons.
Nobody spoke.
Only the storm answered them.
Bab Terbaru
The corridor ended without warning.
Not by wall.
Not by barrier.
But by
The space did not become brighter.
It became more distinguishable.
Edges formed
There was no elevator down.
No shaft.
No mapped transition.
Only the dec
The deeper pattern did not announce itself.
It leaked.
At first, Sari noticed it in
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