Across the small table, a man named Leo Nash preened. He adjusted the knot of his tie, his gaze lingering on her chest.
Aleen looked down at her hands. They were clean. No dirt under the nails, no calluses on the palms. She glanced at her phone, lying face up on the table.
October 12th, 2024.
A cold wave washed over her, so intense it felt like her blood was turning to ice. Her breath hitched in her throat.
Ten days.
Ten days until the world ended.
"You're a quiet one, aren't you?" Leo's hand slid across the table, aiming for hers.
Aleen flinched back as if his touch was a live wire. The motion was sharp, violent. A jolt of pure, physical revulsion shot through her.
Her eyes darted to the slice of lemon loaf cake sitting untouched on her plate. A memory, sharp and brutal, flashed behind her eyes: the gnawing emptiness in her stomach, the desperate search for a single moldy cracker, the feeling of starving to death in a collapsed basement.
Her stomach convulsed, a tight, painful knot.
Leo chuckled, mistaking her recoil for shyness. "Don't be nervous. A girl like you just needs a man to take care of her. Stay at home, look pretty. That's the smart play."
He leaned in, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "You should lock down a guy like me while you can."
Aleen's focus sharpened, the initial shock solidifying into something hard and cold. Candice. Her "best friend" Candice Mayo had set up this date. It wasn't a kind gesture. It was a humiliation ritual, designed to remind Aleen of her place.
Another memory, more vivid and infinitely more painful, exploded in her mind.
Candice, her face twisted in a greedy sneer. Her boyfriend, Colon Leon, holding a bloody knife. And Winston, her little pet pig, squealing in terror before falling silent. They had killed him for a few meals.
Then, the final betrayal. The shove. The feeling of falling into the grasping, rotting hands of the Blighted, their groans filling her ears as Candice and Colon ran away with her last can of food.
The shock vanished. The fear evaporated.
In their place, a chasm of pure, glacial hatred opened up. The warmth of the coffee shop couldn't touch the winter that had just descended upon her soul. Her eyes, which had been dazed moments before, were now as still and cold as a frozen lake.
A flicker in the dark screen of her phone showed her a stranger's face staring back. She blinked, forcing the mask of a nervous young woman back into place, the ice receding just beneath the surface.
The last ten years of struggle, of betrayal, of a brutal, agonizing death-it all flooded back, a tidal wave of memory that washed away any lingering confusion.
Her mind began to work, gears grinding into motion with a terrifying speed.
Time. Money. Revenge.
"You're not very talkative," Leo was saying, a note of irritation in his voice. "Candice said you were... fun."
Aleen's gaze remained fixed on him, but she wasn't truly seeing him. She was seeing ghosts and calculating timelines. Her silence stretched, thick and unnerving. Leo's smile tightened, the first crack in his confident facade. He cleared his throat, leaning forward again, his patience wearing thin.