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Apocalypse Days: I Rule with Foresight and a Powerful Son

You’d think seeing the future would give me a head start on surviving the apocalypse. I had it all planned—until everything I knew shattered when my husband sacrificed himself to save me and our son. Now it’s just me, my three-year-old son Leo, and my cursed gift of foresight that only seems to kick in when it’s nearly too late. I’m doing my best to keep us safe, to find food, to make some kind of plan— “Mommy?” I glance down, trying to ignore the tug on my pant leg as I focus on our supplies. “Not now, Leo. Mommy’s thinking.” “Mommy!” I sigh and finally look down. My three-year-old is standing there, clutching… I blink. “Leo, where did you get a knife?” He shrugs, grinning like it’s the most natural thing in the world. My heart stutters. “No, really. Where did you find that?” I try not to laugh. I mean, he’s three. Maybe he just—found it somewhere? But the next day, it’s a water bottle. Then, a tiny flashlight, somehow with batteries still inside. I don’t even know what else; he’s pulling things out one by one with the pleased grin of a kid who’s just figured out his favorite game. Well, we may just survive this mess after all. Now, if only the universe could have spared me from him. I don’t even know his name, but I know his type: tall, broad, and annoyingly handsome, with an air of calm control that’s out of place in this chaos. Ex-military, if I had to guess, with a voice that’s just as infuriating as his smirk. The man has a habit of showing up at the worst—or best—possible times, with a gun at the ready and secrets buried as deep as those bright green eyes. I mean, he’s probably useful, but I’m trying to keep my eyes on the prize here: survival. For Leo and me. Because, foresight or no foresight, nothing is guaranteed in this new world—except the fact that people like him are trouble.

QuillMistress · Ficção Científica
Classificações insuficientes
79 Chs

26: The World Behind High Walls

The walk to the base was tense, the group's chatter filled with a mixture of wariness and dark humour. One woman, her hair tied back in a severe braid, kept glancing at Zara and muttering under her breath about "bringing kids into this hellhole."

Another man, stocky and heavily armed, cracked jokes about how long Winter and Zara's "marriage" would last.

Zara focused on putting one foot in front of the other, her thoughts swirling. They don't know about Leo. They can't find out. She adjusted her coat, her grip tightening around her son's tiny form.

Winter, ever observant, took in the group's dynamics—the way Scar-Cheek barked orders but deferred to the older man, the subtle deference others gave to the woman with the braid. The two of them must be ability holders, then. 

His sharp eyes swept the terrain, cataloguing exits and potential threats.