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BENEATH THE ICE: An Interactive Horror Novel

DeepanshuSetia
14
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Three weeks ago, Outpost Polaris went silent. The international research station, positioned above the deepest trench in the Arctic Circle, had made the discovery of the century: a subglacial cavern system containing liquid water—and something alive in samples dating back 50,000 years. Then the screaming started. Then the silence. You are Dr. Alex Chen, crisis management specialist, sent with a four-person emergency response team to investigate. What you find is worse than anyone imagined: a station intact but abandoned, emergency power flickering through empty corridors, and a drilling rig still operational—its bore hole descending 3.2 kilometers into absolute darkness. The research team didn't just disappear. They found something down there. Something ancient. Something that's been waiting beneath the ice, learning, adapting, and now it's inside the station. Every choice you make could save your team—or doom them. Trust the wrong person. Investigate the wrong room. Make one mistake, and you'll discover what happened to the original crew. The hard way. In the Arctic, no one can hear you scream. And the ice remembers everything. --- Interactive Horror | Multiple Endings | Survival Not Guaranteed Genre: Sci-Fi Horror | Thriller | Interactive Fiction Tags: #Survival #Mystery #Cosmic Horror #Antarctica #ChoicesMatter #Parasite #Isolation #BodyHorror
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Arrival at Polaris

The helicopter blades chopped through Arctic air as Outpost Polaris came into view through the cockpit window.

Dr. Alex Chen pressed a gloved hand against the cold glass, breath fogging it instantly. Below, the ice shelf stretched in every direction—a vast white void broken only by the dark cluster of modular buildings that made up the research station. The midnight sun hung perpetually on the horizon, casting everything in an eerie orange glow that made the landscape look alien, hostile.

"There," Marcus Webb's voice crackled through the headset. The ex-SAS operative sat across from Chen, his weathered face betraying no emotion as he pointed. "Landing zone. Still marked."

Emergency flares created pools of red light around the designated helicopter pad. They'd been burning for weeks, Chen realized. Someone had set them out and never came back to turn them off.

The pilot's voice cut through: "Visual confirmation—station appears intact. No personnel visible. I'm putting us down, but I'm not staying longer than it takes to unload. This place gives me the creeps."

Beside Chen, Dr. Nora Okafor leaned forward, her dark eyes scanning the station hungrily. "The drilling rig is still operational," she said, unable to hide the excitement in her voice. "You can see the bore hole platform from here."

"Da," Sergei Volkov rumbled from the back. The grizzled Russian engineer hadn't stopped frowning since they'd left Longyearbyen. "Everything looks normal. Too normal. No people, but everything working." He shook his head. "Wrong. All wrong."

The helicopter touched down in a swirl of snow and ice. Through the window, Chen could see supply crates near the entrance to the main hub—some covered in fresh snow, others torn open, their contents scattered. Dark stains streaked the ice between the crates and the station entrance.

The pilot didn't kill the engine. "Thirty seconds, people. Whatever you need, grab it fast."

Chen looked at the team. Marcus was already checking his equipment—rifle, sidearm, emergency flares, climbing gear. Nora clutched her sample case like it was precious cargo. Sergei had his massive toolkit and a coil of rope over his shoulder.

The station waited. Silent. The emergency lights flickered in the windows of the central dome.

Chen's training kicked in. First rule of crisis management: assess before you act. But they had seconds to decide.

The emergency medical kit and environmental sensors sat in one locker—if there was biological contamination, they needed to know immediately. In another locker, the portable communications relay and backup power cells waited. Restoring contact with the outside world could be the priority.

Chen's hand hovered between the two options, mind racing through contingencies and protocols.

Which choice would give them the best chance of survival?