LOGINThe morning air felt cold. Josh paced along the porch, his eyes fixed on the heavy iron gates. Natasha had been taken away for the past twenty-four hours, and there was nothing he could do to bring her back. The weight of it sat deep in his chest.
“She’s gone, Josh,” Martha said as she sipped her coffee. Her voice was flat. “Accept it. A woman like that… she was always pushing too far. She probably got herself into trouble. Nobody even knew she was bitten.” Josh turned sharply. “She’s the best we have, Mom, and she's not just anyone. She's my wife.” Beside Martha, Evelyn sobbed. She looked small, wrapped in a thick cardigan. “It’s all my fault,” she said through her tears. “If I wasn’t sick, I would have checked on her. She said she had a fever.” Josh looked at her, his chest tightening. “No, it’s not your fault. It’s mine. I found her on the bathroom floor with that fever. I should have known something was wrong. I should have done something.” “She treated me like a big sister,” Evelyn cried. “And now she’s gone.” Before Josh could respond, a loud, sharp alarm cut through the air. It was the perimeter siren, a sound they had not heard in months. “Infected at the north gate!” a guard shouted. Josh grabbed his rifle, his thoughts racing. The base was supposed to be safe. Natasha had spent months setting up traps to keep the infected away. Why were they here now? He ran toward the wall, with Martha and Evelyn right behind him. When he climbed up, his stomach dropped. Hundreds of them pressed against the steel fence. These were not the slow, clumsy zombies from before. These were Hollows. Their skin was gray, and their movements were fast and restless. “Open fire!” Josh ordered. The guards raised their weapons—Stingers, the air rifles Natasha had designed. They fired small darts filled with a chemical that weakened the infected instead of killing them. When the darts hit, the effect was almost instant. The creatures slowed, their movements breaking down as the drug spread through them. “They’re getting through the gap!” Martha shouted. In the confusion, a few weakened zombies pushed through a loose part of the fence. Josh turned, ready to fire, but Martha was closer. She grabbed a heavy wooden pole and tried to push one of them back. She wore thick gloves, but as she shoved the creature, her foot slipped. The zombie lunged. Its teeth tore through the leather and sank deep into her forearm. “No!” Josh shouted. He fired again, dropping the creature, then rushed forward and pulled his mother away. The fight ended quickly, but it was not easy. The guards used fire to burn what was left, and soon the courtyard fell silent except for the crackle of flames and Martha’s uneven breathing. They carried her to the clinic—the same room where Josh had argued with Natasha just two days ago. Martha lay on the bed, her skin turning pale. Dark veins began to spread from the bite on her arm. “Do something!” Josh shouted at the two young lab assistants. “I was bitten once, and I survived. How did I survive?” Nobody spoke, because they had no answer for him. “It wasn’t luck,” a rough voice said from the doorway. An old man stepped in. It was Miller, the base’s handyman. He had been gone for two days in search of peace. He leaned on his cane, his face serious. “I saw what happened,” he said quietly. “A year ago, when you were lying in this same bed. Everyone else was outside worrying. I came in to check on you, and then I saw Natasha.” Josh frowned. “What do you mean?” “She had a needle in her arm,” Miller said. “She was drawing her own blood. She looked weak, like she could collapse at any moment. Then she took that blood and pushed it into your IV line. She stayed with you until your fever broke, even though she could barely stand.” Josh felt like the ground was shifting under him. “Her blood? That doesn’t make sense.” “It’s the truth,” Miller said. “She didn’t want you to know. She said you wouldn’t understand.” Josh turned to Evelyn, his eyes filled with urgency. “Evelyn, you were there. You told me you stayed with me. You said you were the one who helped me when Natasha was out scouting for help.” Evelyn stepped back, her face pale. She glanced at Martha, then back at Josh. The fear in her eyes was clear. “I… I stayed with you,” she said weakly. “I gave you water. I held your hand, that was all I did.” “Did you save me?” Josh stepped closer, his voice low and sharp. “Look at my mother. Save her. You know how much she cares about you. If you saved me, then save her now.” Evelyn broke down, her tears coming harder now. “I can’t!” she cried. “I didn’t do anything! It was Natasha. I just… I let you believe it was me because I wanted you to love me again.” Silence filled the room. Josh looked at his mother. Her body was shaking, her grip tight on the sheets as her eyes rolled back. Then his gaze moved to the cabinet nearby, where Natasha’s tools were arranged neatly, just as she had always kept them. The truth hit him hard. The reason the base had stayed safe… was Natasha. And now she is gone. “I have to find her,” Josh said softly, his voice breaking. “I have to bring her back.” But when he looked out the window at the empty road, he remembered the look in Natasha’s eyes before they took her away. He had let it happen, he had sent her away himself, she was not coming back. And for the very first time in Josh's Adamson life , he understood something he had never faced before. He could not live without her. “What have I done?” he whispered as he dropped to his knees beside his mother’s bed. Outside, the wind picked up, moving through the empty watchtower where Natasha used to stand. But she was gone. And now, everything was starting to fall apart.The reinforced steel gate opened slowly. Years of dust and weather groaned through its heavy hinges as sunlight spilled across the concrete courtyard beyond. No one lowered their weapons immediately. Neither side trusted easily anymore. That was what almost three years of the apocalypse had taught everyone. Natasha remained where she was, her heartbeat had finally begun to settle, but her thoughts had not. The image of the Night Hunter being thrown backward replayed over and over inside her mind. It's not as if she touched or fired at it. She hadn't even raised her hand, yet something inside her responded. Something neither she nor Elias knew existed. Claire stepped beside her. "You alright?" Natasha nodded slowly. "I think so." "You don't sound convinced." "I'm not." Claire looked toward the tree line where the Night Hunters had disappeared. "Neither am I." A few yards away, Rowan quietly lowered his rifle. For one of the few times Natasha had known him, he looked genuine
Claire moved with the New Haven soldiers, shouting orders that sharpened their line. Rowan directed the left flank. Marcus and Garrick covered the helicopter zone. Nyra dropped to one knee and began firing controlled shots, not wasting ammunition, aiming for joints and eyes. The arsenal soldiers fought too. They were disciplined, but tired. And frightened. Natasha could see it. They had faced these creatures before and lost men to them. A Night Hunter launched itself toward the outer barricade, crossing open ground with terrifying speed. The wall guns followed it, but too slow. It hit one of the lower barricades, climbed, and lunged toward a young arsenal soldier positioned near a damaged gate post. The soldier froze. Natasha moved. She ran before anyone could stop her. “Natasha!” Rowan shouted. She crossed the open ground fast, lifted her rifle and fired twice. The first shot struck the creature’s shoulder. The second hit its side. It barely slowed. The Night Hunter chang
Dax grinned slightly. “That sounds like something you say right before we waste a lot of ammunition.” Natasha gave him a look. He lifted both hands. “I am focused.” “You had better be.” The pilot’s voice returned. “Visual on the arsenal.” Every person inside the helicopter turned toward the windows. The Strategic Reserve Arsenal appeared ahead through the morning haze. It was massive, far larger than the drone footage had made it seem. A wide military compound stretched across several miles of land, surrounded by layered fencing, concrete barriers, watchtowers and blast walls. The outer perimeter had clearly taken heavy damage over the years. Sections of fencing were crushed inward. Burned vehicles formed makeshift barricades near the eastern entrance. Several watchtowers had collapsed entirely, while others still stood with patched metal plates and sandbags stacked around them. Beyond the outer zone sat the inner compound that was still intact. Natasha noticed it im
The helicopters started one after another while the ground crews removed the wheel chocks and the pilots performed their final checks. The sound filled the airport district. Rotor blades turned slowly at first, then faster, cutting through the early morning air with a heavy rhythm that made everyone on the flight line look up. Floodlights still burned around the runway because dawn had not fully broken, but the sky had begun to pale behind the eastern wall of New Haven. Two helicopters stood ready. For months, engineers had repaired them, tested them, argued over them, and guarded every piece of equipment needed to keep them alive. Now the aircraft waited beneath the wide sky, their bodies loaded with soldiers, medical supplies, emergency rations, ammunition, and enough fuel to get them back even if the mission went wrong. Natasha stood beside the first helicopter with her rifle strapped across her chest. Her team was already boarding. Rowan climbed in first, followed by Dax, N
The command center remained busy long after the meeting ended. Officers moved from one station to another carrying reports, updated drone images and handwritten notes. Large digital maps covered the main display, each one showing a different part of the route leading toward the Strategic Reserve Arsenal. Nobody treated the mission lightly. They couldn't. The arsenal had survived for years. If the reports were true, then a handful of soldiers had defended one of the country's largest military reserves since civilization collapsed. That alone deserved respect. But respect alone would not bring them home. Natasha stood before one of the tactical screens, quietly studying the latest drone footage. The video was slowed. Frame by frame. She watched one of the Night Hunters emerge from the tree line. Unlike the Hollows, it didn't wander aimlessly, It observed, and It paused, Then it disappeared into the shadows with frightening speed. Claire walked over carrying a folder. "I've rev
“Aaron,” Rowan said carefully, “with respect, this is exactly the kind of mission her team was trained for.” “I said no.” This time the room became heavier. Claire watched silently. Marcus shifted uncomfortably. Dax looked between Natasha and Aaron and wisely said nothing. But Rowan took one slow breath. “Commander, I am sorry, but right now you are speaking as her lover.” The silence sharpened, Aaron’s gaze locked on Rowan. Rowan did not flinch. “Right now, I need you to speak as the leader of New Haven.” Natasha felt the weight of the words settle across the room. But Rowan continued, still respectful but firm. “Natasha might be your woman, but she is also the most experienced operative we have for a mission like this. Her team will answer to her in the field because they have done it before. We all have.” Aaron’s jaw tightened. He knew Rowan was right and that was the problem. Natasha stepped forward before the argument could grow. “Rowan is right.” Aaron turned to her,
The laboratory remained active long after sunset. Most of New Haven had settled into its evening routine — families eating dinner, children being tucked into beds, guards changing shifts on the walls. But inside the research facility, every light remained on. The hum of computers and the soft glo
Three days passed quickly. New Haven became busier than Natasha had ever seen it. Construction crews worked from sunrise until late evening. Supply teams moved in and out through the district gates. Scouts returned daily with reports about surrounding zones, while engineers prepared equipment for
Natasha was the first to look away. She suddenly became very interested in gathering documents that no longer needed gathering. Aaron hid his smile. But not very successfully. "Walk with me." Natasha looked up. "Where?" "The laboratory." Her heartbeat betrayed her again. The laboratory? Whi
Natasha woke up with a start. For a few seconds, she simply stared at the ceiling above her bed, confused by the strange feeling in her chest. Her heartbeat was unusually fast. Warmth lingered beneath her skin. It took her several moments to realize what had pulled her from sleep. Was it the kiss?







