MasukShe trusted him with the end of the world. He left her for dead in it. When the zombie apocalypse hits, Maya Rodriguez already knows who she's going to survive with — and who she's going to survive for. What she doesn't know is that her boyfriend has other plans. Ones that don't include her. Abandoned, alone, and furious in a world that has just ended, Maya finds herself with an unlikely companion: LUS, a rogue AI life coach who is equal parts infuriating and inexplicably useful, and who may know more about how the outbreak started than he's letting on. Surviving the apocalypse turns out to be the easy part. Because the world Maya's navigating isn't just full of the undead. It's full of engineered soldiers — wolves in human skin, built by the same government programme that unleashed the virus. It's full of men who want to protect her, want to use her, want to earn her, and want to be forgiven by her. And it's full of one specific slow burn she has categorically refused to name. She's not the woman she was before the world ended. She's considerably more dangerous. ***A post-apocalyptic romance about survival, betrayal, rogue AI, and the specific problem of falling in love when everything is already on fire.
Lihat lebih banyakThe world should end on a Monday.
There’s something honest about that. Brutal, yes, but clean. A Monday already has the emotional texture of damp socks and unpaid bills, so adding zombies feels less like a cosmic betrayal and more like management escalating a complaint.
Unfortunately, the world chooses Thursday at 6:17 p.m., while Maya Rodriguez is standing barefoot in her kitchen, trying to decide whether expired sour cream is a negotiable concept.
“It smells fine,” Dex says from behind her.
Maya looks at him over her shoulder.
Dex Hartley is twenty-nine, handsome in the irritating way of men who don’t know where the plunger lives, and currently holding a spoon like he’s about to conduct a scientific trial on dairy products from the back of the fridge.
“That’s not a defence,” Maya says. “That’s what people say before poisoning guests.”
“We don’t have guests.”
“Exactly. It would just be us. A murder-suicide via nachos.”
On the television, a news anchor says, “—reports of violent incidents across multiple districts—”
Maya turns.
Not because of the words. Words like violent incidents have been on the news forever, furniture in the corner while people keep eating dinner. But because of the anchor's face. He is smiling wrong.
Not happy. Not calm. Just professionally welded together while something behind his eyes kicks at the door.
Dex lowers the spoon.
The screen cuts to a phone video, shaky and vertical, because even at the end of civilisation, humanity refuses to turn the camera sideways. A man in a torn suit runs into traffic. Behind him, a woman with blood down her blouse tackles him so hard they disappear under the hood of a taxi. The camera drops. The sound keeps going.
Maya’s stomach goes cold.
Not fear yet. Fear has imagination. This is simpler. This is the body looking at something before the brain has agreed to name it.
She is, in most emergencies, insufferably prepared. She reads evacuation maps in hotel rooms. She owns batteries. She has opinions about duct tape brands. For this, she has exactly one half-bag of tortilla chips, expired sour cream, and a boyfriend asking questions like she's the customer support line for Armageddon.
Outside, sirens begin. Not one. Not two.
All of them.
Overlapping and frantic, a mechanical choir of absolutely not fine.
“Shoes,” she says. “Now.”
“What?”
“Shoes. Bags. Water. We’re leaving.”
“Leaving? Maya, they said stay indoors.”
“They also said violent incidents, Dex. That is news-anchor code for ‘we lost Steve in the parking lot and nobody wants to say bitten.’”
She yanks open the pantry and starts triage. Cans. Protein bars. Peanut butter. The good knife from the block, because if she dies holding the cheap bendy one, she is haunting herself first.
Seven floors down, the street has come apart. Cars sit crooked in the intersection. One is on fire, because of course one is. Mrs. Alvarez from 6B is on the sidewalk in her pink housecoat, swinging a grocery bag at a man trying to grab her arm.
The man lifts his head. His mouth is red. Mrs. Alvarez hits him with what appears to be a frozen chicken.
Maya has never admired another woman more in her life.
Then he lunges, and Maya is already moving. The armour snaps on.
***
The apartment door gives way behind them as they hit the fire escape. Hot air, smoke, the city burning in ugly patches. Nothing so cinematic as a grand blaze, just orange blooming block by block while sirens scream until they sound less like rescue and more like grief with a battery pack.
"Where are we going?" Dex pants somewhere below her.
"Away from here."
"Where's away?"
"Traditionally, not here."
His voice goes small. Scared in a way that punches through her irritation and finds the soft place she keeps locked in a box labelled Later, Maybe, After Coffee.
Dex is not built for fast collapse. He is built for asking what everyone wants on pizza and remembering her mother's birthday. He is kind, in an inconsistent way. Funny when nobody needs him to be brave.
And Maya loves him. God help her, she loves him enough to be annoyed that he is making her feel it during a municipal emergency.
“We get to the stairwell,” she says, gentler. “We avoid crowds. We get to my car if we can. If not, we head east on foot. Your brother’s cabin is two hours out.”
“Three with traffic.”
She glances toward the street, where a car horn begins blaring and does not stop. "I'm going to be optimistic and assume traffic law has resigned."
They make the fire escape. Then the alley. Then the street. Behind them, the apartment does what apartments do at the end of the world — it stops being theirs.
Dex keeps asking where they're going. Maya keeps moving. At some point she grabs his face with both hands, forces his eyes to hers.
"I need you with me. Questions later. Running now."
For half a second he is the man she loves. Present. Frightened. Trying.
He nods.
Maya lets go and runs.
"Thursday," she mutters, as smoke rolls over the skyline.
Dex looks at her. "What?"
"The world ends on a Thursday."
Something screams from inside the building above them.
Maya starts climbing down.
The silence that follows is not a glitch. Maya knows the difference now. This is the other kind. The pause a true answer requires before it allows itself to exist.That is not precisely the word for what will happen, says LUS.“Then what is?”Completion.Maya stares into the middle distance for a long time. Completion. Not death.She turns the word over the way she turns everything over, examining every surface, looking for the hidden hinge. The comfortable lie. The technical distinction placed there to make the unbearable sound like filing.There is no lie. It means exactly what it says. That precision is the point.LUS is not dying. It is finishing. A thing designed for a purpose, reaching the far edge of that purpose, stopping the way a sentence stops when there is nothing left to add.Not interrupted. Concluded.Maya suspects this is intended to comfort her. It does not. She cannot immed
The glitch lasts eleven minutes.Maya counts every one. She has become good at counting them.It begins as fear management and becomes data, which is the usual migration route for anything unpleasant in Maya’s life. The first crack lasts three minutes. The second, several weeks ago, ran close to twenty and returned with something wrong in the cadence, a fractional drag between words that she notices immediately and still pretends not to.This one lasts eleven.It arrives in the middle of the rotation math. The logistics. The work she handed LUS not long ago with her eyes open and her pride temporarily locked in a cupboard where it cannot interfere.For eleven minutes, the thing Maya deliberately chooses to lean on is simply gone.She stands in her quarters holding half a supply graph, staring at figures that no longer update, with the cold understanding that she allowed LUS to become load-bearing immediately before it began failing.
Maya stands in the dusty stairwell and sees Eli.Suddenly.Completely.Not Eli the carpenter.Not the calm hands, the quiet voice, the man who knows where to stand when everyone else is moving too quickly.The person beneath all of it. A man built, all the way down, to go in after people. A rescuer living in a world that keeps running out of people to find. A man marking empty doorways because somewhere inside him the next team still deserves to know what happened here, even when the next team no longer exists.It is the most Eli thing Maya has ever witnessed.An hour earlier, she had no idea it was there. And then, with a small internal lurch, she sees the other part.It is exactly what she is.Eli runs into the broken buildings. Maya builds the systems that keep people from having to enter them.Two people constructed around rescue, finding one another in the world that needs saving most and has the least left t
They have been walking for three hours and have exchanged perhaps forty words.That is the part Maya finds unsettling.Not the silence. Maya is perfectly comfortable with silence. She has invented several excellent ones herself.It is the ease of it.With anyone else, three hours of quiet becomes something that requires maintenance. A held breath, a low electrical hum of who is going to speak first, the conversational equivalent of carrying a tray full of glasses and pretending not to notice.With Eli, silence is weather.They move through the dead suburb toward the facility LUS flags from the intercept, dividing the road without discussing it. Eli reads the left side. Maya takes the right. They check doors, windows, rooftops, sight lines. Neither asks what the other is doing because each already knows.The lack of friction is so complete Maya keeps prodding at it mentally, the way a tongue worries a loose tooth.Anyth
There’s a moment, right before it happens, where the world sharpens.Not slows.Sharpens.Edges come into focus. Angles. Distances. The exact placement of everybody between her and the impossible idea of escape.Maya sees all of it.The gap that isn’t a gap. The hand already reaching for her throat.
Running should feel like escape.Forward motion. Distance. The idea that if you just keep going, the thing behind you becomes less.Maya runs and learns that distance is a theory.Reality is corners. Reality is breath. Reality is how long your legs keep agreeing to the contract while you gave it ver
She moves through the warehouse in loops.Check doors. Check windows. Check roof. Check the street. Back down. Repeat. Movement keeps the edges from closing in. Sitting still makes the silence louder, and the silence has opinions now.On the second day alone, she sees the first horde.Not a swarm. N
People always think the worst part is the moment something breaks.The shouting. The betrayal. The door slamming.They don’t account for the quiet.Maya wakes up because it’s too quiet. Not the outside quiet. That’s been wrong for days, a thin, stretched silence over something that used to be loud.
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