The Eternal White Belt

Chapter 72: Defensive Stand, Protecting the Vulnerable



The weight of Chimera pressed down on Baek as they navigated the facility’s frigid archives, Jin and Yuuji close behind. To learn adaptability wasn't just observed, but twisted, exploited, and then tossed aside like garbage… it left a bitter taste in his mouth, a churning in his gut. Min-Soo, Ji-Min – their faces flashed in his mind, a constant, stark reminder of the stakes, of why they were playing this deadly game.

“Data transfer’s live,” Yuna’s voice crackled, laced with a grim urgency. “It's a flood, Baek. Their AI is pinging it, but the main system’s drowning in research logs. They've got their heads buried. We've got…maybe ten minutes before they slam the doors shut or send in the cleaners.”

“Ten minutes is all we need,” Baek replied, already scanning for the quickest escape. They had it. The nauseating truth of Project Chimera, flowing now into Yuna's hidden servers.

Then, a new voice, razor-sharp with panic, tore through their comms. Ji-Min.

“Teacher Baek! Someone’s here! At the center! Big guys… all in black!”

Baek’s blood ran cold. The community center. The kids.

“Committee retrieval unit detected,” Nam's voice, grim and absolute. “Multiple signatures. They're moving – fast. Bypassed the outer alarms. Yuna, they're heading straight for the youth hall."

A pincer move. While the Alliance team was knee-deep in enemy territory, a precision strike, cold and lethal, targeted their most vulnerable.

"They split the team!" Yuuji roared, his voice cracking with fury. "They knew we were coming!"

"Yuna, Nam, protect them!" Baek barked, his voice tight, desperate. His heart hammered against his ribs like a trapped bird. He was miles away, caged in the enemy's core, while those kids… the kids he'd sworn to protect…

Back at the hideout, the alarms on the comms screamed, a jarring contrast to the quiet whir of Yuna’s server. Her face was bone-white, fingers dancing across the keyboard, wrestling with the community center’s janky surveillance. Nam, his shoulder aching like a fresh wound, moved with a speed that defied the pain, snatching up their small bag of cobbled-together defenses.

"They’re inside," Yuna breathed, pulling up a grainy feed: masked figures in black, moving through the community center's entrance hall with chilling efficiency. "Four agents. Standard retrieval loadout.”

"Too many for me alone," Nam grunted, strapping on his brace, his mind already sketching out angles, choke points, desperate gambits. "Yuna, you're my eyes. Lights, doors, anything you can mess with. I'm moving to intercept."

He exploded out of the hideout, sprinting through the familiar alleyways toward the community center. His injured shoulder screamed a white-hot protest, but the primal need to protect those kids drowned it out. Each stride on the cold asphalt was an act of defiance.

The community center, usually alive with noise and playful energy, was silent as a tomb. The kids, thank God, were in the secure back room, thanks to Ji-Min’s sharp eyes and quick thinking. But the agents were inside, moving like shadows.

Nam burst through a side entrance, adrenaline flooding his veins. He saw them – two agents near the main hall, already closing on the youth hall’s entrance. Their movements were liquid, precise. Not Inverse Path, but the newer Chimera breeds, wired for covert acquisition, suppression.

“Yuna! Lights!” Nam barked into his comms.

The overhead lights in the community center’s main hall flickered, stuttered, then died, plunging the space into sudden, disorienting black.

The agents, trusting their enhanced senses, paused, momentarily thrown off balance.

Nam moved.

He launched himself at the closest agent, not with brute force, but with the subtle, adaptable techniques he’d honed. His injured shoulder screamed, but he ignored it. He swept low, not for a crippling blow, but for the agent’s center of gravity, a precise tap to the side of the knee. The agent stumbled, his enhanced senses useless against the sudden, unexpected disruption to his kinetic chain.

Nam flowed into him, a precise hand to the arm, subtly redirecting the agent’s momentum, slamming him into the wall with a muffled thud. Not a knockout, not a break, just a subtle redirection, using the agent's own power against him. The agent’s grunt was cut short as Nam applied a swift, targeted pressure point, not for pain, but for temporary paralysis. The agent slumped, neutralized.

“One down,” Nam grunted, his breath ragged, his focus absolute.

Yuna’s voice, strained but triumphant: “Got it! Locking down the main entrance! Looping the surveillance feeds. They’re blind out there, Nam!”

The remaining three agents, now aware they were being actively countered, fanned out, their movements sharper, more aggressive. Silent as ghosts, their hands danced, probing for pressure points, targeting vital nerve clusters. They were good. Too good for a single, injured fighter.

Nam danced, adapted. He wasn’t trying to win a stand-up fight. He was buying time, scrambling their coordination, shielding the children. He weaponized the environment – a heavy training dummy became a makeshift shield, a stack of mats a momentary barrier. He weaved between their attacks, deflecting their precise strikes with fluid, leveraging movements, countering their attempts at restraint with his own refined control holds.

One agent lunged, aiming for his throat. Nam twisted, shifted his weight, using the agent's own momentum against him, sending him sprawling into a stack of chairs with a deafening crash.

“They’re triangulating the kids’ room,” Yuna warned, her voice tight with panic. “They’re breaching the inner door!”

Nam cursed, a silent, bitter word. He couldn’t be everywhere. He was outnumbered, outgunned.

Then, a deafening, disorienting siren blared, not from the Committee, but from inside the community center. It wasn't a standard alarm. It was a raw, erratic wail, a sonic weapon tearing through the building.

Yuna.

The agents flinched, their enhanced senses overloaded by the uncontrolled noise. Their movements stuttered, their focus fragmented.

Nam seized the opening. He swept one agent’s legs out from under him, then flowed into a new, improvised restraint, binding the agent’s arms with a discarded jump rope. He chose a different approach for the last agent. A short, brutal jab to the ribs, followed by a quick, twisting grab of the arm. Not to shatter it, but to wrench it, forcing the agent to cry out, shattering their silent discipline.

The chaotic siren continued to wail, a dissonant symphony of chaos. The remaining agents, their stealth shredded, their target still locked down, exchanged curt, almost imperceptible hand signals. Extraction was paramount. Prolonged engagement was a liability. The mission was compromised.

With swift, brutal efficiency, they disengaged, melting back out of the community center’s side door, vanishing into the night.

The siren died, leaving a ringing void.

Nam stood amidst the wreckage of scattered chairs and overturned training equipment, his breath ragged, his shoulder screaming. But the kids were safe. He could hear their muffled cries from the secure back room.

Yuna’s voice, exhausted but relieved: “They’re gone. For now. Are you… are you okay, Nam?”

“Fine,” Nam rasped, wiping sweat from his brow. He wasn’t fine. His shoulder was on fire, his muscles screamed in protest. But the chilling reality of the coordinated attack had sunk in. The Committee wasn’t playing games anymore. They were hitting them where it hurt most.

He stumbled towards the secured room, his mind already racing, calculating the next move. This wasn’t over. The infiltration was still running, but the war had just landed on their doorstep. Their desperate, last-ditch defense had held, but it had laid bare the horrifying scope of the Committee’s simultaneous assault. The fight for the vulnerable was far from over.

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