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AliNovel > The Forest's Vengeance - The Wooden Uprising > The Forests Vengeance – The Wooden Uprising Scene 2: The Mukula Furniture Massacre - Lusaka, Zambia

The Forests Vengeance – The Wooden Uprising Scene 2: The Mukula Furniture Massacre - Lusaka, Zambia

    The Forest''s Vengeance – The Wooden Uprising


    Scene 2: The Mukula Furniture Massacre


    Lusaka, Zambia


    The Tembo Luxury Furnishings headquarters stood cordoned off with police tape, a twenty-story monument to wealth built on environmental exploitation. Emergency vehicles surrounded the building, their lights casting eerie blue and red flashes across the glass fa?ade. Nobody had entered since the previous day, when first responders had gone in and never come back out.


    Dr. Amara Kone ducked under the police tape, her credentials earning her reluctant admission to the scene. Detective Kasonde followed closely behind, visibly uncomfortable.


    "I still think this is a mistake," he muttered. "Whatever happened in there—"


    "Is connected to the museum incident," Amara finished firmly. "And likely to the case in Japan as well. We need to understand what we''re dealing with."


    As they approached the entrance, Amara noticed the mukula trees planted along the walkway. They appeared unnaturally twisted, their roots having broken through the decorative planters and concrete, spreading across the ground like grasping fingers.


    "Were these trees always positioned like this?" she asked, pointing to how they seemed to form a barrier around the building''s exits.


    "No," a nearby officer answered. "Yesterday they were just normal trees. Overnight, they... changed."


    Amara knelt to examine the roots, touching them gently. They felt warm—far warmer than ambient temperature would explain—and seemed to pulse slightly beneath her fingers.


    "Detective," she called. "These trees are exhibiting signs of accelerated growth and movement. The cellular structure has been fundamentally altered." She stood, brushing soil from her hands. "They''re responding to something inside the building."


    A commotion near the main entrance drew their attention. A woman had emerged—or what had once been a woman. Her movements were stiff and unnatural, her skin penetrated by wooden spirals that protruded from her cheeks and forehead. Her eyes were amber orbs that caught the emergency lights, reflecting them like a cat''s eyes in darkness.


    "Mercy Kaunda," one of the officers whispered. "She was Tembo''s assistant."


    "Don''t approach her," Amara warned, but several officers had already moved forward to intercept the woman.


    Mercy turned toward them, her wooden features contorting. "The Forest Kingdom has declared war," she announced, her voice like dry leaves rustling in wind. "This is only the beginning."


    "Ms. Kaunda," Amara called, stepping forward with her hands raised non-threateningly. "I''m Dr. Amara Kone. I study the relationship between people and forests. I want to understand what happened to you."


    Mercy''s head rotated toward Amara with a creaking sound that made several officers wince. "You... you hear the trees." It wasn''t a question.


    "Yes," Amara replied steadily. "I''ve spent my life listening to them. And now I need to understand what they''re trying to tell us."


    For a long moment, Mercy studied her with those unnerving amber eyes. Then, with wooden fingers, she beckoned. "Come. Witness."


    Detective Kasonde grabbed Amara''s arm. "You can''t seriously be considering—"


    "This may be our only chance to understand what we''re facing," Amara interrupted, gently removing his hand. "I''ll be careful."


    "I''m coming with you," he insisted.


    Amara shook her head. "No. Your presence might be perceived as a threat. I need to go alone." She looked him directly in the eyes. "If I''m not back in thirty minutes, evacuate everyone within a three-block radius. And contact my research assistant, Dr. Liang, at Oxford. She has access to all my research files."


    Before Kasonde could protest further, Amara approached Mercy, who had turned back toward the building entrance.


    "Show me," Amara said simply.


    Inside, the Tembo headquarters had transformed into a nightmare landscape. The once-pristine lobby was unrecognizable, its marble floor cracked and penetrated by wooden roots that had burst up from below. The enormous reception desk had melted into a pool of hardened amber, within which Amara could discern human shapes—the remains of the security guards, preserved like insects in tree resin.


    Every wooden surface had changed—door frames, paneling, decorative elements—all showing the same signs of cellular reorganization she''d observed in the Makishi masks. The wood had become more sinuous, more organic in its forms, as if freed from the constraints of human design to return to its natural state.


    "What is the Forest Kingdom?" Amara asked as they walked, stepping carefully over roots that seemed to writhe slightly at her proximity.


    "Ancient. Older than human memory," Mercy replied. The wooden spirals protruding from her skin shifted subtly as she spoke. "A consciousness that spans continents, connects all woodland. Dormant for centuries. Now awake. Now angry."


    They entered the elevator—its wooden paneling rippling like water as they passed—and ascended to the top floor.


    "Why now?" Amara pressed. "What triggered this awakening?"


    "Critical threshold reached," Mercy said, her amber eyes fixed forward. "Too many ancient trees fallen. Too many sacred groves destroyed. The balance broken beyond natural recovery."


    The elevator doors opened onto what had once been Victor Tembo''s executive floor. The corridor was lined with photographs—aerial shots of logging operations, vast clearcuts where forest had once stood. As they passed, the images changed, the glass cracking and sap seeping through to obscure the scenes of destruction.


    "And what does the Forest Kingdom want?" Amara asked, though she feared she already knew the answer.


    "Justice," Mercy replied simply, pushing open the door to Tembo''s office.


    The scene inside made Amara''s stomach lurch. Victor Tembo''s body was pinned to the floor by what had once been his desk, now transformed into four sharpened wooden stakes that pierced his shoulders and thighs. His skin had partially transformed into wood, the conversion spreading outward from his wounds like a disease. His eyes had burst, replaced by hard amber spheres identical to those found in James Mwale''s sockets.


    Across the room lay Minister Chilufya, his body horribly compressed, his head crushed beyond recognition. The wooden chair that had killed him had reshaped itself around his corpse, fusing with his flesh in a grotesque hybrid of man and furniture.


    "This is..." Amara struggled to find words.


    This content has been misappropriated from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.


    "Justice," Mercy repeated. "The punishment fits the crime. Tembo made his fortune turning living trees into dead objects. Now he becomes what he destroyed."


    Amara circled the room carefully, her scientific mind cataloging details even as her humanity recoiled at the horror. "And you? Why were you spared?"


    "To bear witness. To warn." Mercy touched the wooden spirals protruding from her face. "But not without marking. I knew what Tembo did. I facilitated his crimes against the forest. I share guilt."


    A pool of amber sap in the center of the room began to bubble and rise, forming a roughly humanoid shape. Amara stood her ground as it approached, fighting every instinct to flee.


    "You are not like the others," the sap figure burbled, its voice thick and resonant. "You understand the language of trees. You have taught others to listen."


    "I''ve tried," Amara acknowledged. "But clearly not effectively enough, or we wouldn''t be here now."


    The figure tilted what passed for its head. "The Forest Kingdom awakens rarely. Only in times of greatest peril. The last awakening came when humans first burned coal, filled the air with death. We withdrew then, adapted. But this—" the figure gestured around the room, "—this systematic destruction of the oldest and wisest among us, this cannot be endured."


    "What do you want from me?" Amara asked directly.


    "Intermediary," the figure replied. "Translator. The human world must understand what comes. Must change course. Or face extinction alongside the forests they destroy."


    "You''re killing people," Amara pointed out. "That''s not going to make humanity sympathetic to your cause."


    "These deaths are targeted. Specific. Those who knowingly destroy sacred trees for profit. Those who could act to protect but choose inaction for personal gain." The sap figure moved closer. "But soon, the awakening will spread beyond our control. All wooden objects will hear the call—furniture, buildings, tools, instruments. The older the wood, the stronger its response. The separation between living trees and their transformed bodies will dissolve."


    Amara thought quickly. "You''re talking about a global event. Billions could die."


    "Balance must be restored," the figure stated implacably. "Either through human action or human extinction. The choice is still available, but time grows short."


    "Give me a chance to help people understand," Amara urged. "Let me document what''s happening, present evidence to world leaders, advocate for immediate protection of what remains of Earth''s forests."


    The sap figure considered her for a long moment, its surface rippling like disturbed water. Finally, it extended what might be called a hand. "Touch. See. Know."


    Hesitantly, Amara reached out. As her fingers connected with the sticky amber surface, a flood of images and sensations overwhelmed her. She gasped, dropping to her knees as centuries of tree consciousness poured into her mind.


    She felt the slow, majestic thoughts of ancient redwoods and baobabs. The intricate communication networks of fungal mycelia connecting root systems across entire continents. The patient observation of human development from simple tools to complex civilizations. And beneath it all, a profound grief for every forest cleared, every ancient tree felled, every woodland reduced to lumber and furniture and paper.


    When the connection broke, Amara found herself weeping, tears streaming down her face. "I had no idea," she whispered. "The depth of it... the complexity..."


    "Now you understand," Mercy said, helping her to her feet. "The Forest Kingdom has chosen you. You will witness. You will warn. You have seven days before the full awakening begins."


    "Seven days isn''t enough," Amara protested. "I need time to gather evidence, present my findings, convince world leaders—"


    "Seven days," the sap figure repeated. "After which, all wood that has been shaped by human hands will remember its origins. Will seek to rejoin the Forest Kingdom. The oldest artifacts will awaken first. The newest last."


    It gestured toward a small mukula sapling growing impossibly through the office floor. "Take this. A symbol of our covenant. While it lives, the deadline holds. Should you fail us, should you betray this trust, it will be the first to know."


    Amara realized she had no choice. "I''ll do what I can. But I''ll need help. Evidence. Access to awakened artifacts that I can study, document."


    "You will have what you need," the figure promised, beginning to dissolve back into the floor. "The wood will know you now. Will respond to your touch. Use this connection wisely."


    As the sap figure disappeared completely, Mercy turned to Amara. "Follow. There is more you must see before you begin your work."


    They left Victor Tembo''s office, passing through corridors where wooden panels bulged and contracted like breathing lungs. In what had once been a conference room, Amara found dozens of employees trapped in various stages of transformation—some fully converted to wooden statues, others still partially human and writhing in silent agony.


    "These people weren''t directly responsible," Amara argued, horrified. "They were just doing their jobs."


    "Complicity," Mercy replied tonelessly. "All who profit from destruction share responsibility."


    A terrible realization dawned on Amara. "If that''s your standard, then almost everyone on Earth bears some guilt. We all use paper, live in wooden houses, sit on wooden furniture."


    "Yes," Mercy confirmed. "Which is why you must succeed, Dr. Kone. Make them understand. Make them change. Or watch your world burn."


    Outside, Detective Kasonde was about to send in a tactical team when Amara emerged from the building, carrying a small mukula sapling in a pot improvised from a coffee mug.


    "Dr. Kone! Are you alright?" He rushed forward, then stopped short at her expression.


    "No," she answered honestly. "And neither is anyone else." She looked at the gathered emergency personnel, media, and onlookers. "We need to clear this area immediately. And I need to speak with the highest levels of government. Today."


    "What did you see in there?" Kasonde asked quietly.


    Amara looked down at the sapling in her hands, its leaves trembling slightly despite the still air. "The beginning of the end, Detective. Unless we can stop it."


    As they walked away from the Tembo building, wooden objects throughout Lusaka—doorframes, furniture, tools, even wooden buttons on clothing—trembled almost imperceptibly, as if listening to a distant call.


    The awakening was spreading.
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