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My 100th Rebirth a day before the Apocalypse

Kisha Aldens is a normal office worker with average earnings, not until she suddenly sees a system countdown in front of her. Her mind suddenly received a prompt warning about the apocalypse and urged her to integrate with the system to assist her with her survival. "Have I overworked myself again?" She thought while pinching the bridge of her nose. She blinked a few more times but the system interface is still there. Little did she know that this system would be her last lifeline in the upcoming apocalypse where human morals would be the lowest, trust is only a word and betrayal could happen in the blink of an eye. A naive person like her had to learn her lesson the hard way on how to survive and navigate in the zombie-infested world. And the worst part, she had to die 99 times to harden her heart and learn how to read the human heart. How will her 100th time be different from the previous lives, will she survive this time? And will survival be her only problem in the heart of the Apocalypse? No, there was a deeper scheme in play which she has to uncover moving forward.

GoddessKM · Fantasy
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493 Chs

Chapter 281 The Mass Awakening Started 4

Observing the medical personnel and the doctor she had previously guided frantically trying to manage the influx of patients, Kisha realized she needed to take decisive action. She understood that without her intervention, their base risked collapsing from within, they would be overrun by zombies and chaos. Stepping in to oversee the situation, she knew her vigilance was crucial to preventing a complete breakdown of their defenses.

Upon witnessing the pandemonium and the medical staff scrambling to attend to multiple patients at once, Kisha quickly stowed her lunch box into her inventory. Taking charge of the situation, she asserted her authority and organized the staff into action. Using her 'Eye of Truth' ability, she identified patients exhibiting Talent or Gifts, grouping them together and assigning them to a single room. This allowed family members to assist in caring for the sick, effectively lightening the load on the overburdened medical team.