Rahul decided it was time to conduct a large-scale experiment. This time, the target would be a mid-sized tribe of 10,000 people. He wanted to observe, on a grander scale, the destructive effects of his specimen: how the bugs would propagate, how the humans would react under stress, and, most importantly, how the orcs, the rulers of humans in the main world, would respond when confronted with his creation. The first real confrontation would be between Rahul, the biological madman, and the orcs.
He planned carefully. The tribe was 100 kilometers away from his current base, and the journey alone would take a week. Rahul traveled with his loyal death warriors, carrying equipment, specimens, and supplies necessary to establish a secure observation point. He was aware that the scale of this experiment required far greater caution than his previous trials.
Upon reaching the vicinity of the tribe, Rahul spent several days scouting for a suitable base — a hidden location from which he could monitor the tribe, observe their daily routines, and deploy his specimens strategically. The base needed to be secure, undetectable, and close enough to the tribe to allow real-time observation, but far enough to avoid immediate confrontation.
Finally, he found a fortified cave system overlooking the outskirts of the tribe. From here, he could see the villages spread across the plains, the movement of people, and the patrols of orc overseers who kept the humans in check. The scale of the population was overwhelming, but Rahul felt a surge of excitement. This was the perfect stage to test the limits of his creation, to observe the chaos, and to gather critical behavioral data.
He knew that careful planning was key. Any mistakes could expose him, compromise the experiment, or alert the orcs prematurely. For now, Rahul began laying the groundwork: mapping the villages, noting water sources, food storage areas, and orc patrol routes. The first step of his large-scale biological experiment had begun.Rahul waited for nightfall. Darkness was his ally, hiding the movements of his death warriors as they carried the first batch of specimens toward the tribe. The plan was simple but precise: contaminate water sources, food storage areas, and other high-traffic locations to maximize exposure without immediate detection. Each step was executed with surgical precision.
From his hidden vantage point, Rahul watched as the first effects began to show. In one of the villages, a young four-armed humanoid drank from the well, unaware of the tiny, almost invisible bugs in the water. Within hours, subtle signs emerged: restlessness, minor tremors, and slight pallor. Others nearby began to behave erratically — dropping tools, clutching their stomachs, or moving sluggishly.
The orcs, stationed as masters of the tribe, noticed the abnormalities almost immediately. Twenty of them were spread throughout the settlement, enforcing labor in mines, fields, and workshops. They attempted to maintain order, inspecting workers, shouting commands, and forcing productivity. But the spread of Rahul's specimens disrupted everything. Creatures fell ill too quickly, and their behaviors became unpredictable. Orcs tried to isolate the affected, but panic and confusion spread faster than discipline could contain.
By the second day, the first severe symptoms emerged. The infected humanoids displayed grotesque physical changes — abdominal swelling, convulsions, and writhing movements. Some vomited dark fluid filled with wriggling larvae. Orcs attempted to intervene, but their rigid enforcement methods failed against an invisible, biological threat.
Rahul watched carefully, noting the reactions of both the humanoids and their orc overseers. The creatures' panic was instinctive: some fled toward the mountains, others hid in huts, and some continued working despite severe illness. The orcs, frustrated and confused, tried to maintain control, but several had to personally restrain infected workers, realizing too late that containment was nearly impossible.
By the third night, fatalities began. Individual humanoids collapsed violently; larvae emerged from their bodies, moving rapidly to infect others nearby. Orc patrols scrambled to remove the corpses, but the specimens had already spread further through water sources, food supplies, and communal areas. Entire sections of the village descended into chaos, as the surviving humanoids either fled or froze in terror.
Rahul catalogued every observation meticulously:
Behavioral Response: Flight, freezing, and erratic work patterns
Mortality Timing: First deaths 48–72 hours post-exposure
Orc Reaction: Immediate containment attempts, patrol reallocation, physical restraint of workers
Specimen Spread: Water sources, food stores, and high-traffic communal areas facilitated rapid propagation
From his cave, Rahul began planning the next phase. He would introduce more specimens strategically, observe how the humanoids' social structure broke down under the pressure of the infection, and monitor how the orcs adjusted their control strategies. The experiment was in full motion, and the first signs of large-scale collapse were already apparent.
Rahul allowed himself a small, satisfied smile. This was exactly what he wanted: a live demonstration of biological dominance, social disruption, and the subtle cracks in the control exerted by the orcs. The stage was set, and the chaos had only just begun.
Rahul observation notes
Day 1 – Initial Contamination
Rahul's death warriors deployed the first batch of specimens into wells, food stores, and communal areas while the humanoids slept. By dawn, subtle signs appeared:
Minor tremors in hands and limbs
Restlessness and hesitation during routine work
Slight pallor of skin
The orcs immediately noticed irregularities. Patrols were intensified, and twenty Orcs coordinated to identify the source. Some infected humanoids were forcibly removed from work areas, but the invisible nature of the pathogen left the orcs blind to its presence. Rahul noted that panic spread faster than the physical effects of the specimen.
Observation notes:
Early-stage infection signs appear within 6–12 hours
Human-like panic behaviors accelerate the spread
Orc enforcement slows containment by creating bottlenecks
---
Day 2 – First Severe Symptoms
By the second day, moderate symptoms emerged among humanoids:
Abdominal swelling
Erratic limb movements
Uncoordinated work patterns
Larvae were expelled from infected humanoids through vomit or excretions, contaminating previously clean areas. The orcs attempted to isolate the affected, but logistical challenges made containment nearly impossible. Some humanoids tried to flee; others froze in terror, abandoning work and supplies.
Observation notes:
Specimen reproduction begins inside hosts after ~24 hours
Larvae survive in communal areas for up to 20 minutes initially
Orcs' rigid enforcement fails under unpredictable humanoid behavior
---
Day 3 – Social Collapse Begins
The outbreak accelerated. Small clusters of humanoids collapsed mid-task; convulsions and larval expulsion became widespread. Orc patrols tried to move sick individuals to temporary quarantine areas but were overwhelmed. Panic behaviors—fleeing, hoarding, and defensive aggression—amplified the spread.
Observation notes:
Mortality rate begins: ~2–3% of infected humanoids
Social cohesion breaks in small work groups
Orcs resort to physical restraint, but stress and fatigue reduce effectiveness
---
Day 4 – Rapid Propagation
By the fourth day, multiple villages were affected. Water sources, food storage, and high-traffic paths became secondary infection hubs. Some humanoids began to collapse while others continued working out of instinct or ignorance. Orcs tried to reorganize labor, placing healthy workers at the front, but infected individuals moved unpredictably.
Observation notes:
Specimen incubation shortened due to larger host population
Egg output per host increases exponentially (~500–1000 eggs per host in 24 hours)
Flight and panic behaviors increase cross-village infection vectors
---
Day 5 – Orcs Attempt Containment
Orcs intensified patrols, set up checkpoints, and attempted selective quarantines. Some humanoids resisted isolation, attacking overseers or fleeing, inadvertently spreading the specimens further. By evening, the orcs realized the outbreak could not be fully contained without extreme force, but their number was insufficient.
Observation notes:
Orc intervention delays some transmission but cannot prevent it
Specimen survival outside hosts improves as environmental adaptation begins
Behavioral data: infected humanoids show decreased coordination and increased aggression
---
Day 6 – Mass Collapse
The majority of the infected humanoids displayed severe symptoms:
Violent convulsions
Expulsion of large numbers of larvae
Lethargy and inability to perform tasks
Orcs were forced to retreat to central strongholds as villages became unmanageable. Panic spread to nearby communities. Rahul recorded every movement, every collapse, and every failed containment attempt. The humanoid tribe was unraveling, the specimens adapting with each host.
Observation notes:
Mortality rate climbs to ~30% in first villages
Specimen evolution observed: partial wing formation, faster movement
Orc authority erodes under mass panic
---
Day 7 – Controlled Chaos
By the seventh day, large-scale abandonment began. Villages emptied as surviving humanoids fled or hid. The orcs struggled to maintain any semblance of control. Rahul observed nests of larvae forming outside the bodies of the deceased, ready to infect the next wave of hosts.
He noted critical points for refinement:
1. Increasing larvae survival in open air
2. Maximizing host-to-host transmission during flight
3. Observing behavioral triggers that accelerate panic
The experiment yielded full-scale data: population collapse rate, social disruption metrics, mortality timelines, specimen reproduction efficiency, and host behavioral responses under panic and extreme stress. Rahul smiled. The experiment confirmed the destructive potential of his creation on a population of 10,000 — and provided him with a blueprint for optimization and further large-scale deployment.
Rahul was happy to see the effect because if human wants to occupy this tribe thei atleast have to send an army of 50000 with large logistic and here his small tiny lovely specimen done that in 7 days only.