The Wasps of Java: Urban Swarm
Chapter 3: The Empty Buildings
Part-2 https://wp.me/p84YjG-5QR
The following morning, Jakarta looked like a city under siege.
The streets that usually pulsed with honking horns and motorbikes buzzing through traffic were strangely quiet. Shops had pulled their shutters down. Food stalls that normally lined the sidewalks sat abandoned, pots of rice left to spoil. Billboards still glowed above the skyline, but their light reflected off empty roads where yesterday’s chaos had forced people indoors.

Police barricades stood at major intersections. Soldiers in fatigues clutched rifles, sweat shining on their faces under the crushing tropical heat. A helicopter thumped overhead, circling low, scanning for movement. But even that sound was soon drowned out by the faint, unnerving buzz that now seemed to seep from every corner of the city.
Inside the hotel, Maya and Arif sat by the window with a group of strangers who had taken refuge there. A woman cradled her crying baby. A pair of students clutched their phones, livestreaming bits of the carnage before service cut out. Everyone spoke in whispers, as if raising their voices might draw the swarm closer.
Arif had barely slept. The images of the park, the way the swarm had moved like a trained military unit, gnawed at his mind. He had studied insects before, but this was something else. This was adaptation at terrifying speed.
“Maya,” he whispered, leaning close. “They weren’t random. Did you see how they surrounded the police line? Like they knew how to cut it off?”
She nodded, her face pale. “It felt like they were planning.”
That word lingered in the air like poison: planning.
By midday, news crackled through radios. Entire blocks had been abandoned overnight. Families fled in cars, clogging highways leading out of the capital. But not everyone had made it out. Somewhere near Glodok, an entire apartment complex had gone silent. The army went in and never came back out.
That was when reports began spreading of the nests.
Not the papery, tree-hung kind of nests people imagined. These were sprawling colonies that filled the skeletons of abandoned buildings. Witnesses spoke of once-empty malls where the walls seemed alive with shifting, crawling bodies. Office towers where windows darkened as if curtains had been drawn, only for the glass to rattle with thousands of wings inside.
The wasps were moving in, and they were claiming the city’s ruins.
That night, Arif insisted on leaving the safety of the hotel to see it for himself. Maya argued furiously, but in the end she followed him, her flashlight gripped tightly in her hand.
They slipped through the deserted streets of Central Jakarta, stepping over overturned food carts and broken helmets. The city was hushed, but here and there the faint flicker of wings darted in the streetlights. It felt like walking through a graveyard.
Finally, they reached a five-story shopping complex that had been gutted years ago. The sign above still read Plaza Menteng, its paint faded and peeling. Inside, the air was hot, thick with a sharp, chemical tang. The buzzing began almost immediately.
Maya froze. “Arif, no. We shouldn’t.”
But he crept forward, peering past the cracked glass doors. The atrium was alive. From floor to ceiling, the interior shimmered with layers of wasps crawling across the walls, constructing strange, pulpy structures that looked half hive, half architecture. They used concrete beams as anchors, hanging thick mats of chewed plant matter between them like curtains. From the rafters, long chains of wasps dangled together, weaving and repairing holes.
And in the center of the atrium, beneath the half-collapsed escalator, pulsed something bigger.
A nest core.
It was like a beating organ, layers of chewed material stacked high, rippling as thousands of wasps shifted in and out of it. The surface moved constantly, as if breathing. From within, a low vibration resonated, making Maya’s ribs rattle.
“They’ve… colonized it,” Arif whispered. His voice cracked, half in awe, half in terror. “They’re not just hunting. They’re building civilization.”
Suddenly, the buzzing shifted pitch. Both froze as hundreds of heads turned in eerie unison toward the doorway. For a heartbeat the swarm held still, waiting. Then, as if on cue, the outer layers of the nest peeled away, and a surge of wasps poured forth, wings slicing the air.
Maya screamed. They ran, feet pounding broken concrete, ducking as the swarm burst out behind them. The night filled with sound — the high-pitched whine of wings, the clatter of metal shutters as wasps slammed against them, the echo of boots slapping pavement.
They didn’t stop running until they had scrambled through an alley and leapt into a drainage canal, the stench of waste water choking them. Above, the swarm circled, hunting. The colony had noticed them, and it would not forget.
Back at the hotel, Maya collapsed against the wall, chest heaving.
“Now we know,” she said, voice ragged. “They don’t just want to sting us. They want the city itself.”
Arif closed his eyes, the awful truth solidifying in his mind. The wasps had turned Jakarta into their hive. And the longer humans hid, the more buildings would fall under their control.
It was no longer a question of if the city would survive. It was how long until the swarm claimed everything.

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