Chapter 8: Lao Chen (Finale)

It took me nearly 30 minutes to walk from the bottom of the valley to the main entrance of Wangxing Village, intending to hand over Dr. Xing's recorder to the comrades in the headquarters for repair. Pen, fun, pavilion www. biquge。 infoAt this time, I no longer had the heart to look at the mountains and rivers around me, and Dr. Xing's hysterical voice seemed to still echo in my ears. What unspeakable horrors are taking place in this small village? What exactly is that so-called flu epidemic? With a stomach full of questions, I was heavy and prepared to go down the previous route.

When I walked outside the small bungalow of the village hall, a most strange feeling suddenly hit me. It was as if the sky had suddenly darkened, and something heavy was coming down. But when I looked up, the sky was still blue and clear. But that lingering feeling haunted me, and I even thought it was sadness, a pure sadness that had been detached from the human body, and I just crashed into this sadness.

A little light in the corner of my field of vision instantly caught my attention. Someone is in the house! My brain reacted, and my body had subconsciously rushed past. In the distance, I could see a humanoid light in the village chief's office, and I saw him stumbling down at his desk, turning around and rummaging through the bookshelves behind him.

Standing outside the window, I saw Lao Chen's familiar figure desperately flipping through the thick yellow pages of the government in front of me at the table, and then picked up the phone at hand and dialed them one by one. But it was useless, all communications in the village were cut off. My guess is that it's not a simple communication failure, because generally speaking, even if the phone lines are all down for some reason, the cell phone signal is not completely lost. Unless there is either an extremely rare natural situation that affects the electromagnetic signal in the entire area, or there is an order from the top to cut off the communication signal of all villagers.

I hurried into the house and saw that he was still on the phone, one after the other. No, no, no. A liquid light trickled down his nose and down his chin on the yellow pages beneath his hand, right in the middle of the dry, blackened bloodstains. He took the paper next to him and wiped it, wiped his nose, wiped the yellow pages, and then went on to make a phone call, squinting and wiping the blood-soaked phone number. "Hurry up, pick it up..."

I looked at him sadly, desperately trying to make this distress call. And the light on his body began to become brighter and brighter, and he could see that there were thousands of small points of light in it. I was surprised and stunned, and watched Lao Chen's figure gradually lie motionless on the table with my mouth open, and the light on my body suddenly flew up like fireflies on a summer night, fluttering and scattered in the air, and then gradually dimmed, like a fire candle in the wind, the last little bit was extinguished, and it disappeared into the long dark night forever.

There was still a faint light in the air, and I looked out the window, the stars twinkling. I saw the most eerie sky, as if there was a huge arc of electricity passing through it. The night sky, which was originally as black as velvet and pure, was now glowing with a strange dark red, and there were several intertwined lights, drawing unbelievable spiral patterns in the night sky, intertwining and changing, like a spear straight down from the sky, disappearing out of my field of vision.

I lowered my head, put the phone receiver on the table, and then turned and walked out of the small bungalow of the village government.

Outside the window, the sun was warm, and it was a sunny noon.