Vampire Progenitor System
Chapter 131: Project Black Broadcast

Chapter 131: Project Black Broadcast

South Africa – Resistance Deep Bunker

Underground Command Chamber – 04:16 AM

Smoke still clung to the ceiling. The walls were cracked from the last tremor. Screens flickered with red alerts. Base after base: offline. Destroyed. Gone.

Calen Rooks stood in the center of it all—coat dusted in ash, eyes sunken but sharp. Rage simmered under his skin, but he didn’t scream. He didn’t curse. He watched.

The holographic world map in front of him bled with red—each pulsing mark a lost outpost.

"...The bastard is relentless," he muttered, voice cold. "He destroyed almost all our bases."

He stepped forward and zoomed in on a cluster—Tokyo, Paris, Nairobi. All gone.

Lucifer Origin.

That vampire demon freak had turned his righteous crusade into a massacre.

But Calen wasn’t broken. No.

He was thinking.

He turned to the group gathered behind him—technicians, field commanders, cyber-assassins, and a few of the surviving young soldiers, barely in their twenties. Their faces were pale. Some trembling.

He didn’t blame them.

"I want full diagnostics," he ordered. "Power grid, sleeper cells, everything still connected to the old net. I need eyes on every supernatural zone left standing."

A woman stepped forward. "Sir, our global presence has been reduced by seventy-eight percent. We don’t have the numbers to launch a counterstrike."

Calen turned slowly. His stare shut her up before he even opened his mouth.

"I don’t need numbers," he said. "I need leverage."

He walked to the far corner of the chamber. A sealed vault hissed open at his command, revealing a dusty black case locked behind reinforced glass.

Inside it—footage. Hard drives. Real images. Screams. Experiments. Ambushes. Civilians caught in supernatural crossfire. Some clips were raw. Some were edited.

All of it was damning.

Calen’s fingers brushed the case.

"They want war?" he said, voice tightening. "Fine. Then I’ll give them a war."

He turned back to the room.

"We’ve been painted as terrorists, as monsters—but let the world see the truth. Show them the witches who burned entire buildings when provoked. The vampires who bled whole families dry. The werewolves that mauled innocents in the Tear. We have it all."

"But sir," someone started, "some of those were accidents—others retaliation."

Calen snapped his head to them. "And what do you think their leaders are doing now? Burning us with mercy?"

Silence.

Calen opened the case. Pulled out the drive. Held it up between two fingers.

"We’re going to broadcast it. Unedited. Raw. With subtitles in thirty languages. Let the world decide."

He started pacing now. Calm. But deadly.

"Mobilize the media agents. Wake the sleeper stations. Trigger the fear protocol across every human territory still untouched."

"And the supernaturals?"

He stopped, looking over his shoulder.

"They’ll be forced into hiding again. Public opinion is stronger than fangs and spells. And if that doesn’t work..." He nodded toward a sealed container near the back wall. The technicians flinched.

Inside were the early models of biochemical suppressants. Designed to weaken supernatural auras. Still unstable. Still illegal. Still deadly.

Calen smiled.

"We’ll make them sick of their own power."

One of the soldiers stepped up, hesitantly. "But Lucifer... he won’t care about broadcasts."

"No," Calen said softly. "He won’t. But the world will."

He turned to the main screen again, loading the footage.

"If the people turn against them, even Lucifer can’t burn everyone."

Then he spoke louder—voice echoing through the chamber.

"This is no longer about revenge. This is strategy. They want blood? We drown them in fear. We destroy their reputation. Make them run. Make them doubt. Make their own kind question their place in the world."

He clenched his fists.

"They ruined my family. They tore my world apart."

He pointed to the screen.

"Now I’ll tear theirs."

A pause.

Then—"Begin Project Black Broadcast."

The room snapped into motion. Files transferred. Signals bounced. In ten minutes, the plan would go live.

And Calen Rooks would become more dangerous than ever—not just as a man with weapons.

But as a man with a story.

And the world would listen.

Enclave Citadel

The chamber was quiet. Too quiet.

A long obsidian table stretched down the center of the room, dimly lit by the violet glow of mana crystals embedded in the ceiling. Around it sat the leaders of the supernatural factions—each with different looks, but the same heavy air hung over them.

Vladimir sat rigid, arms folded, fangs just peeking from beneath his lips. Vulpina leaned back with her arms crossed, fox ears twitching now and then, amber eyes unreadable. Greta said nothing, only watching the others with a glass of red wine untouched by her lips. Boris’s fingers tapped slowly on the table—anxious, steady.

Then there was silence.

Until the doors opened.

Fowler walked in.

He looked tired. Pale. But not from fear.

From what he knew.

Behind him, two escorts brought in a secured case and placed it gently at the end of the table. Fowler didn’t sit. He just stood, staring at each leader in turn.

"Sorry for the delay," he said finally, his voice low and firm. "We have a problem."

Vulpina rolled her eyes. "We know. Our people are being hunted like animals."

"This isn’t about that," Fowler said.

Everyone looked at him.

He reached into the case and pulled out a tablet, projecting it to the center of the table. The hologram flickered to life—images, documents, names.

A single photo expanded and locked in place.

Calen Rooks.

The room tensed.

Fowler nodded slowly. "That’s him. The one orchestrating the Resistance attacks."

Greta’s eyes narrowed. "He’s just a man."

"No," Fowler said. "He’s the man. He built the network. He led the raids. Every cell that struck one of your kind reported back to him. Every broadcast, every leak, every massacre traces back to his command."

"Why now?" Boris asked. "Why go this far after all this time?"

Fowler paused.

Then brought up another image.

The Russian flag.

Then a man in a suit. Broad-shouldered. Grey eyes. Cold stare.

Prime Minister Malakov.

"He’s not alone," Fowler said. "He’s backed by Malakov. Financially. Militarily. Politically."

Vulpina stood suddenly, hands on the table. "You’re telling me one of the most powerful humans on the planet is funding this madness?"

"Yes."

"And you’re just bringing this to us now?"

"Because I just confirmed it yesterday," Fowler said. "We’ve been running deep traces on off-grid intel channels. Most of the Resistance moved underground after Lucifer’s attack. But Calen didn’t go dark. He went louder."

He switched the display again.

A global map lit up.

Each red mark pulsed—live feeds, broadcasts, data surges.

"Project Black Broadcast," Fowler continued. "Ten minutes ago, they launched it. A coordinated global release of every supernatural incident they could get their hands on. Edited, spliced, weaponized. Some real. Some half-truths. Some staged."

Vladimir clenched his jaw. "Public sentiment is already tense. This will flip it."

"Exactly," Fowler said. "Humans are panicking. They’re afraid. And fear needs a target. The broadcasts paint us as that target."

"So what now?" Greta asked, calm but sharp. "You want us to start killing human governments?"

"No," Fowler said quickly. "That’s what Calen wants. He wants you to snap. To strike. So he can prove the story he’s selling is real. You become the monsters he needs."

Silence returned.

Then Vulpina sat back down, breathing out slowly.

"So what do we do?"

Fowler tapped the table again. A smaller display floated above the main one—underground movements, sleeping allies, politicians who didn’t agree with Malakov.

"We play smarter. We expose him. Not just to the humans, but to the humans who still think. We show them what he’s done behind the curtain. What he’s building."

"And what is he building?" Vladimir asked.

Fowler gave them a hard look.

"A genocide machine."

He pointed to an image. Crates. Laboratories. Chemical formulas.

"Biochemical suppressants. Weaponized fear. He’s engineering a global system to root out anything even linked to supernatural bloodlines. Kitsune children. Half-vampires. Spirit-touched humans. He doesn’t care who gets caught."

Greta’s eyes narrowed. "That’s a new Holocaust."

"And it’s starting now," Fowler said. "That’s why I needed all of you here."

Vulpina leaned forward, her voice low. "Where’s Lucifer?"

Fowler hesitated.

"Lucifer’s already moving," he said. "But not politically. Not diplomatically."

"Meaning?"

"He’s waging war."

They all understood then.

Lucifer wasn’t going to wait for negotiations or subtle shifts. He would drown the Resistance in blood.

Fowler looked at them all again. "You’re the leaders now. Not just of your races—but of everyone who hasn’t chosen a side yet. If we want to stop this spiral, we need to move now. And move right."

A beat passed.

Then Boris stood up.

"I want names. Locations. Weak points."

Greta nodded. "We have to take the fight to the ones funding this. Not just the ones pulling triggers."

Vulpina’s lips curled in a sharp grin. "Let’s play this game their way. But better."

Fowler tapped the last command on the tablet.

"Then welcome to the counterstrike."

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