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Bbdc 7.1 Online

Venn adjusted her scope. At first, nothing. Then the mist parted.

A deer stood at the edge of the fence. That wasn’t unusual. Animals often wandered close, drawn by the warmth of the boundary emitters. But this deer had no head. Where its neck should have ended, a pale, fibrous bloom of fungus arched upward like a crown, and nestled in its center, a single human eye—blue, wide, and unblinking.

The rain over the Hífen Gap fell sideways, driven by a wind that hadn’t stopped in three hundred days. Sergeant Mira Venn pulled her hood tighter and watched the treeline through the scope of her Mark-IX rifle. Behind her, the low hum of the boundary fence vibrated through her boots—a sound she’d learned to sleep to. bbdc 7.1

“We were your soil,” the thought continued, calm and terrible. “Your cells. Your dead. You built a wall against your own reflection.”

The rain hammered down. The boundary fence hummed its endless note. And Venn realized: BBDC 7.1 wasn’t there to stop the Mold. They were there because the Mold was already inside them. Waiting. Remembering. Venn adjusted her scope

BBDC 7.1 wasn’t a famous unit. There were no medals, no news reels, no parades. Their job was simple: make sure nothing from the other side crossed the line. The “other side” had no official name, just a vector— Bio-Anomaly Zone 7 . After the Sporefall of ‘41, Zone 7 had rewritten biology. Trees grew nervous systems. Foxes developed larynxes capable of human speech, though all they ever said were prayers in no known language. And the Mold—capital M—moved like a slow, patient predator.

“You’re lying,” she said.

She lowered her rifle.

Then it spoke.

“Check your own blood, Sergeant. The test they gave you last month. Look for the marker they said was ‘vaccine residue.’ It wasn’t a vaccine. It was a leash.”