RebalScript

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Seeing the planet through one Black & White photo at a time.

Welcome to The Lens and Line, your one-stop destination for community-focused writing and photography services. Our blog and podcast aim to showcase the most important issues affecting our communities, from local businesses and sports groups to social and political topics.

“Crowns of Heaven”
21/07/2025

“Crowns of Heaven”

“Visions”
21/07/2025

“Visions”

Sunday’s Black and Whites.
20/07/2025

Sunday’s Black and Whites.

“The sky is falling”
20/07/2025

“The sky is falling”

Early morning, session .. COLDASF!!!!! ….
08/07/2025

Early morning, session .. COLDASF!!!!! ….

Only a beginner and still scratching the surface with this macro styled photgraphy. I do love a challenge.
15/05/2025

Only a beginner and still scratching the surface with this macro styled photgraphy. I do love a challenge.

Issue  #10 "LS-8: Something in the Water"Chapter 10 — The Way They MovedThe town wasn’t marked on most maps. Just a lake...
21/04/2025

Issue #10 "LS-8: Something in the Water"

Chapter 10 — The Way They Moved

The town wasn’t marked on most maps. Just a lake with a name — Brightwater — and a few roads spiraling outward like veins. No major highways, no train lines, no airport. One way in. One way out. LS-8.

By the time Harper and Renee arrived, it was already too late.

Smoke hung over the trees, clinging low like fog. Houses near the lake had shattered windows, doors wide open. Parked cars sat sideways in driveways, some crashed into fences or each other. There were no bodies in the streets. No noise. Just the stillness that followed after something violent.

Renee checked her GPS. “We’re inside the LS-8 zone now.”

Harper kept his hand on the wrench clipped to his belt, eyes scanning every corner. “Then where the hell are they?”

“I don’t know,” Renee said. “That’s what’s wrong.”

They moved slow, sticking to cover — side yards, hedges, back fences. Harper’s boots crunched on gravel as they crossed a neighborhood with boat docks and rusting mailboxes. The lake shimmered on the other side of the trees, still and glassy. Too still.

“I hate this,” Harper muttered.

Renee stopped in front of a house with its front door swinging open. “Let’s check for survivors.”

They entered carefully. The place had been lived in — kids’ drawings still on the fridge, TV frozen on a weather channel, couch cushions torn and scattered. No blood. No sign of a fight. Just... absence.

“They left fast,” Renee said, kneeling near the door. She picked up a child’s shoe. “No sign of force.”

“Or they were told to leave,” Harper added. “But that doesn’t fit. No evacuation order.”

“Which means they weren’t trying to escape something.”

“They were called.”

That word sat between them.

Renee nodded. “They followed the signal.”

Upstairs, they found a bedroom with an open window. The sheets on the bed were twisted, damp with sweat. On the wall, scrawled in red marker: “It’s in the water.”

Harper stepped back. “What does that mean?”

Renee opened her satchel. She pulled out a testing kit and a sample container. “We find out.”

They reached the lake by late afternoon. The air was colder here. Not wind — a chill, like something in the lake breathed cold across the shore. The water rippled in slow, unnatural patterns. Not waves. Not wind. Something else.

Renee knelt by the shore, pulling on gloves. “This entire outbreak may be environmental. If the signal was a trigger, the water could be the carrier.”

“You think they were infected before the signal?”

“I think they were primed,” Renee said. “Drinking water, maybe airborne. And when the broadcast hit... it activated everything at once.”

Harper kept watch while she took the sample. The woods behind them were quiet. Too quiet. Even birds avoided the lake.

“Renee,” he said.

She looked up.

“Someone’s watching us.”

He couldn’t explain how he knew. But he felt it. A pressure behind the eyes. A presence behind the trees. Not movement. Not sound. Just intent.

They stood and backed away slowly from the shore.

“Where to now?” Harper asked.

“There’s a ranger cabin on the far side,” Renee said. “According to the site map, it’s where the LS-8 transmitter should be.”

“Let’s move.”

The trail around the lake was narrow and overgrown. They moved carefully, quietly. But the deeper they went, the worse it got. They started finding signs — not of struggle, but of gathering.

Small camps. Tents torn open, but no blood. Coolers full of food, untouched. A trail of clothing — jackets, shoes, even glasses — left neatly in a line. Like the people had undressed and walked into the woods without resistance.

“They weren’t taken,” Harper muttered. “They went.”

Renee’s voice was flat. “It’s controlling behavior. Signal-induced migration.”

“They’re not migrating. They’re... assembling.”

She didn’t answer.

They moved on.

Then they heard it — just ahead on the trail. Low voices.

Whispers.

But not human.

They dropped flat behind a fallen tree. Through the brush, they saw them: five figures crouched in a clearing, surrounding something — a dead deer, half-eaten. But they weren’t just eating. They were sharing. One tore flesh and passed it to the next. Quietly. Methodically.

Their skin was slick, almost translucent in the fading light. Veins black. Their heads twitched unnaturally, and their eyes were glassy, pupil-less. But it wasn’t just how they looked.

It was how they moved.

Coordinated. Calculated.

Harper’s breath caught. “They’re not like the ones in Lakeshore.”

“They’ve adapted,” Renee whispered. “This is Stage Two.”

One of them stopped chewing and lifted its head.

Its eyes scanned the treeline.

Then it stood.

Then the others stood.

They turned together.

Stared directly at Harper and Renee’s position.

“Run,” Harper said.

They sprinted back toward the lake, crashing through brush, ducking under branches. The things didn’t howl or scream. They pursued silently, sprinting through the trees without sound, without breath, without rage. Just focus.

Renee pointed. “There!”

The ranger cabin sat at the edge of the lake, partially collapsed, its porch sagging inward. The antenna on the roof was bent but still attached. A faint red light blinked at its base.

The transmitter.

Harper kicked open the door. They burst inside, slammed it shut, and braced it with a fallen beam. Outside, footsteps. Close.

“I’ll kill the signal,” Renee said, running to the console.

Harper turned to face the door, wrench in hand.

The sound stopped.

The silence was worse.

Renee’s hands moved quickly across the controls. “It’s encrypted differently. Hardcoded... wait—”

The signal changed.

It wasn’t a loop anymore.

It was live.

A voice came through the speaker, slow, deliberate.

“Observer Kessler. You are outside protocol range. Return to base.”

Harper’s blood ran cold. “What is that?”

“Your sample is complete. This phase is closed.”

Renee’s voice cracked. “They’re talking to me.”

“Termination scheduled. Three minutes.”

The light on the antenna turned blue.

Then they heard the footsteps again.

Surrounding the cabin.

Dozens now.

Harper moved to the back window. Shapes shifted in the trees. Silent. Waiting.

“We’re surrounded,” he said.

“I can’t stop it from here,” Renee whispered. “They’ve taken control remotely.”

“Then we go,” Harper said. “Now.”

Renee pulled the drive from the transmitter and shoved it into her satchel. “We get this to someone who can shut the rest of them down.”

“How do we get out?”

The wall behind them buckled.

Harper grabbed her hand.

“We don’t go through them.”

He pointed to the lake.

“We go into it.”

They burst through the back door and dove into the freezing water. The shapes in the trees moved toward them, but too late. Harper and Renee disappeared under the surface, kicking hard, the weight of the satchel dragging them down.

Above them, the forest stayed quiet. The cabin lights went out.

The transmission died.

But the broadcast was already sent.

To be continued…

Issue  #9 "Cut the Signal"Chapter 9 The Tower Never SleptThe tower stood like a rusted sentinel above the tree line, its...
14/04/2025

Issue #9 "Cut the Signal"
Chapter 9 The Tower Never Slept

The tower stood like a rusted sentinel above the tree line, its narrow frame rising past the fog line, barely visible in the dimming afternoon light. Steel, bolts, and bone-cold silence. The trees swayed around it, but the tower never moved, like it wasn’t meant to be part of the world below it — like it watched instead.

The three of them stood at its base. The ranger station behind them was locked, booby-trapped with a rigged fire extinguisher and bear spray in case anything followed. The plan was simple: climb, shut down the transmitter, and cut the signal calling the infected.

Harper adjusted the strap on his shoulder; wrench still clipped to his belt. He studied the ladder — rusted, narrow, but intact.

Renee had tied her satchel across her chest, and now, stripped down to only what she needed: samples, notes, the folder from the station. Her face was tight. She hadn’t said much since they found the logs with her name on them.

Ethan, as always, brought the blade. But now there was something colder in him. He didn’t look at Renee. Not directly. Not anymore.

“You sure it’s not motion-triggered?” Harper asked, staring up.

Renee nodded. “No sensors. Analog system. Manual kill switch. Whoever built it didn’t want it automated.”

“Convenient,” Ethan muttered. He gave her a sideways look. “Maybe you can explain why your name was stamped on half those test reports.”

“Later,” Harper snapped.

“No,” Renee said. “He’s right.”

She took a breath. “Before this started, I worked with a contractor — private, federal adjacent. We were studying pathogens, adaptive behavior, but I didn’t know it was this. I wasn’t cleared for field data. They used my credentials to assign me without giving full access. I thought I was monitoring. Turns out I was the alibi.”

Silence.

“Okay,” Harper said. “We still shut it down.”

Ethan nodded, once. Grudging, but real.

They climbed.

The ladder groaned under their weight, but it held. Ten feet, twenty, forty. The fog swallowed the ground below. The wind picked up, and with it came sound: the dull hum of the signal, like tinnitus from the bones of the tower itself.

They reached the top platform after twenty minutes — metal mesh under their boots, high enough to see the edges of the county. Lakeshore to the south, dense forest beyond it, and far in the north, just where the trees broke — the shape of another town.

LS-8, though they didn’t know its name yet.

At the center of the platform was a metal control unit bolted to the frame, the transmitter encased in steel, blinking red with a steady pulse.

“Same loop,” Renee muttered. She opened the panel. “Same broadcast packet. Echo Point’s signature, encrypted. Trigger range: 75 miles.”

“That covers everything in the valley,” Harper said. “Including the next sites.”

“They’re not just calling the infected,” Renee said. “They’re activating them. Waking them up.”

Harper blinked. “What?”

“This isn’t just broadcasting a lure,” she said. “It’s broadcasting the key.”

Ethan stepped forward. “You’re saying this is what starts them?”

“Yes,” Renee said. “The blood we saw — it looked dormant. Like it needed something external to initiate full mutation. A sound. A pattern. A signal like this.”

“Like turning on a switch,” Harper said.

She nodded. “And every site — LS-8, LS-9, whatever else comes after — has its own tower. This is the first.”

Ethan looked out across the trees. “How many switches are there?”

Renee looked back down at the console. A set of linked tower logs were visible now — a network map. Echo Point was just one of seven.

“Too many,” she said.

“So shut it off,” Harper said. “Right now.”

Renee hesitated. Her fingers hovered over the power switches.

“There’s a chance,” she said, “that if we cut it, the infected stop moving. Go dormant. But there’s also a chance it sends out a failsafe — a burst command. A last call.”

“What does that do?”

“I don’t know.”

Ethan didn’t blink. “Then kill it anyway.”

Renee hit the switch.

The red light died. The console hummed once — then went quiet. The signal ended.

Below, the trees didn’t move. The wind didn’t change. For five seconds, everything held its breath.

Then Harper felt it — like pressure leaving a room. A psychic weightlifting off the air. No sound. No snarls. No shuffling. The fog hung still.

“It worked,” he said. “I think it actually—”

The tower shuddered.

A low, unnatural frequency pulsed through the frame, a deep vibration that rattled the teeth. Renee cursed and slammed the panel shut.

“What was that?” Harper asked.

“Failsafe,” she said. “Someone else triggered it.”

“From where?”

She turned the screen back on.

The map had changed.

Two nodes had gone red: LS-8 and LS-9.

“New signals just activated,” she said. “Backup towers. Remote switch. It wasn’t just Echo Point — it was a start point.”

“So they’re still doing it,” Ethan said. “They’re still lighting the fire.”

Renee stared at the blinking nodes. “Which means Lakeshore wasn’t containment. It was calibration.”

They descended fast. No talking. Just wind and steel and the knowledge that what was ahead was bigger than they could handle alone.

When they reached the bottom, Renee pulled out her notebook and ripped it in half. She handed one half to Ethan, the other to Harper.

“We split,” she said. “We have to. If we reach LS-8 and LS-9 before the signals spread too far, we might shut them down the same way.”

“You sure?” Harper asked.

“No,” she said. “But we don’t have time for certainty.”

Ethan grunted. “Guess I’ll see what LS-9 looks like.”

“I’ll take LS-8,” Renee said. “Solo.”

“Like hell,” Harper muttered. “I’m going with you.”

She didn’t argue.

They gathered supplies from the station — maps, canned food, batteries, makeshift weapons. When they stepped outside again, the sky was darker. Not from the sun. From smoke — distant columns on the horizon, both north and west.

Something had already started.

Harper and Renee turned toward LS-8. Ethan toward LS-9.

They didn’t look back.

To Be Continued ...

Issue  #8 "The Road to Echo Point"Chapter 8 Nothing is CleanThe fog had thinned by afternoon, but the cold had not. The ...
06/04/2025

Issue #8 "The Road to Echo Point"
Chapter 8 Nothing is Clean

The fog had thinned by afternoon, but the cold had not. The kind that crept under the skin, tightening muscles and settling into the bone. The town of Lakeshore was behind them now. What was left of it. The streets were quieter. Not empty — just hiding. Like the town itself had learned to breathe quietly. Like it wanted them gone.

Harper, Renee, and Ethan moved fast along the ridge road, winding between thick pines and decaying cabins, their shadows long in the dull gray light. No cars passed. No animals moved. It had been almost an hour since the grocery store — since the transmitter, since the notebook page.

“They don’t come for the blood. They come for the signal.”

It looped in Harper’s head.

That meant this thing — the infection, the outbreak, the madness — it wasn’t just spreading. It was listening. It was following instructions. Someone was guiding it.

Renee marched just ahead, her satchel bouncing lightly with each step. She hadn’t spoken much since they left town. She’d just started walking — eyes forward, locked in, like her body was moving on instinct and her mind was somewhere else entirely.

Ethan trailed a few paces behind, quieter than usual, his knife held in a reverse grip. Every now and then, he'd scan the trees with a quick twist of his neck, like he expected something to jump out and pull him into the woods. Maybe it would.

“You holding up?” Harper asked quietly.

Renee nodded once. “Still thinking.”

“About the blood?”

“About everything.”

They walked a little farther before she added, “That journal entry — it’s not just important. It changes the rules.”

“Explain.”

“We’ve been thinking it spreads like a virus,” she said, keeping her voice low. “Contact. Bites. Fluid. But that entry — it suggests another layer. That it’s being drawn to something. Not by scent. Not by sound. By frequency.”

“You’re saying the infected are... what? Tuned in to some kind of signal?”

“Yes,” she said. “I think the signal is stimulating part of the brain. Like an electrical trigger. I saw something similar in animal trials years ago — controlled migration with frequency bursts. Pigeons, even wolves.”

Harper blinked. “You’re saying someone’s sending zombies marching around like trained dogs?”

“No,” Renee said. “I’m saying they’re wired for control.”

Ethan finally spoke. “Which means someone still has the remote.”

They stopped at a crest in the ridge. Below, through a thinning in the trees, they saw it: Echo Point Station — an old ranger outpost near the base of a rocky incline, surrounded by chain-link fencing and a long gravel drive. It sat quiet, tucked against the edge of a dried-out creek bed. No smoke. No lights. Just stillness.

“That it?” Ethan asked.

“That’s it,” Harper confirmed. “Used to do trauma training here. Satellite uplink. Radio repeater tower on the back lot.”

“Looks dead.”

“Let’s find out,” Renee said.

They descended slowly, cautiously. Each step down the ridge crackled with dead pine needles and old frost. Harper scanned the treeline. No birds. No rustle. Still nothing.

As they neared the gate, Harper motioned for them to stop. He crouched and picked up a rock. Tossed it against the chain-link. The hollow clatter echoed — then died.

No movement.

He stepped forward, unhooked the gate, and pushed it open.

The place was deserted. The ranger vehicles were gone. The ATV shed was broken open. The front door hung slightly ajar. A smear of something dark trailed across the porch steps.

They entered quietly.

The inside was stripped — cabinets open, drawers empty, first aid kits looted. A map of the region still hung on the wall with three red push pins circling Lakeshore.

“Someone was monitoring this,” Renee said. She touched one of the pins. “They were tracking outbreaks.”

Ethan stepped over a broken coffee mug and into the communications room. “You better see this,” he called.

They followed him inside.

The transmitter was still powered. Lights flickered across the console. The broadcast loop was active — that same signal from the grocery store, bouncing off a tower a mile up the hill. A message on repeat.

“...Echo Point Station... safe zone... repeat... safe zone established...”

Harper leaned in. “It’s not live. It’s a recording.”

Renee checked the logs. “Set on a timer. Looped every hour. It’s been playing since three days ago.”

“So who set it?” Ethan asked.

Renee turned slowly. “Maybe the same people who built the infection.”

“Maybe the same people who wanted it to spread,” Harper added.

Something caught his eye — a file folder jammed under the desk. He pulled it out and flipped it open.

Inside were lab reports. Typed. Labeled. Government seals. He read the first line out loud:

“Pathogen Design Trial — Strain K-93, Behavioral Response Programming — Controlled Containment Simulation, Site: LS-7 (Lakeshore).”

Renee exhaled slowly. “Oh my God.”

Harper flipped the page. Test logs. Dosage cycles. Infection rates. Stages of aggression.

And then: Authorized Deployment: Subject Cluster LS-7 / Phase One Commence — March 3, 0200 Hours.

Ethan looked up. “That’s the exact time it started. The man you found on the road. The one who scratched you.”

Renee didn’t move.

Harper turned the page again. Something else — a satellite image of Lakeshore, marked with heat zones and infection radii.

Another note: Field observations required. Observer ID: R.Kessler / Class-3 Access.

Harper looked at Renee. “You knew.”

“No,” she said. “I didn’t. I...”

Ethan stepped forward. “You were assigned to this site.”

“I wasn’t told this,” she said, voice rising. “They flagged an abnormality. They told me to observe — to look for inconsistencies. Not that they had already released it.”

“You were part of the experiment,” Ethan said coldly.

“I was a pawn in it,” she snapped. “Just like everyone else.”

The air was thick. The signal buzzed faintly in the background.

Harper closed the folder. “Doesn’t matter now.”

“The hell it doesn’t,” Ethan barked.

“No — it doesn’t,” Harper said. “Because this is bigger than us. This isn’t about blame. This is about stopping whatever the hell is coming next.”

“Coming next?” Renee asked.

Harper pointed to the folder again. A final note, buried at the bottom of the log:

Phase Two scheduled — 72 hours post-initial release. Relocation sites: Cluster LS-8, LS-9. Urban density thresholds engaged.

“They’re expanding,” Harper said. “Lakeshore was just the first.”

“Which means they’ve already deployed the next site,” Renee whispered.

“Which means we’ve got maybe a day before another town burns,” Harper said. “Unless we stop the transmission. Stop the whole damn system.”

Ethan looked at the tower through the window. It rose like a needle through the trees, barely visible through the mist.

“How do we kill the signal?” he asked.

Renee squared her shoulders.

“We climb.”

To be continued…

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