Font Size
15px

Chapter 2: The Last Piece.

I didn’t know what was happening. One second I was on the ground with teeth in my neck and the reasonable expectation of dying. The next second I was looking at a glowing interface that had apparently decided this was a great ti to introduce itself.

I lay there for a mont, just breathing, doing an inventory. Neck: should be destroyed but was not destroyed. Was in fact warm, the way a wound feels when it’s doing the opposite of a wound’s normal job. I reached up and touched it.

It was smooth and closed. The skin was intact like nothing had happened, which was insane, because sothing had absolutely happened.

[Threat Detected:

Level 4 Infected approaching.

Speed: High

Coordination: Advanced

Recomndation: Run to the walls imdiately.]

Survival ant reacting. I’d spent my whole life running but my legs didn’t want to cooperate this ti. My right one in particular had apparently filed a formal objection sowhere around the ti teeth hit my neck, and was now participating in the escape at a level I could only describe as reluctant. I forced it forward anyway. Survival didn’t care about feelings. I’d learned that before I learned how to read.

The moaning was everywhere now. Not one source. Many. The kind of many that ant the math was not in my favor. I ran. Or did the closest thing to running my malfunctioning body could manage.

The plain wasn’t wilderness, exactly. It was a no man’s land, the dead zone between the outside world and the walls. I’d grown up hearing that it served a purpose: keep the infected visible, deal with them in case they penetrated through the life layer.

The life layer was what people outside called the protective barrier, an invisible line the infected couldn’t cross. Engineered by people smarter than , maintained by people richer than . I didn’t know exactly where it was. I just knew it was ahead, sowhere, and that ahead was the only direction that mattered. The zombies were closing.

[Host advancing at a slow rate. Fifty seconds to the life layer.]

"This," I said through my teeth, "is the best I can do."

[Charge 12%]

One of them reached . I felt the electricity before I understood it. It moved through

like a current finding its path, jumped from my skin to the infected’s, and the thing just stopped. Dried out. Dropped. Like soone had pulled its plug.

Three more ca. Sa result. Which would have been incredible, genuinely one of the top five monts of my life, except I could see the charge percentage dropping on the screen in front of my eyes with every discharge. Eleven. Nine. Six.

The system was burning through whatever I had left like I was a phone being used for navigation in a foreign country. This was not sustainable.

[00:00:20 to the life layer.]

Twenty second. A zombie hit

from behind, full weight, and instead of taking

down it launched

forward. I crossed the line mid-stumble, not gracefully, not heroically, more like a man being thrown through a door he hadn’t opened himself.

The moaning stopped. Behind , through the shimr of the life layer, I could see them piling up against nothing, pressing against the invisible wall, furious and contained. The plain sat quiet beyond them.

In front of

were five people. Three guys, two girls. They were standing close to the walls, which ant they had abilities, which ant they were exactly the kind of people the governnt loudspeakers had been advertising for. They turned around at the sound of my arrival. I must have looked extraordinary. And not in a good way.

The walls were close. Closer than they’d ever been in my life. My charge was at two percent.

[Warning: Recharge Required]

[Charge restored exclusively through sexual activity with female ability users.]

I stared at the notification. Then at the five strangers staring back at . Where the hell was I going to find female ability users?

I filed that under problems for later and focused on the more imdiate situation, which was five people looking at

like I’d just crawled out of a grave. Which, to be fair, was roughly accurate.

They were all clean. Not man-in-the-desert clean, genuinely clean, like people who had access to soap and had been using it regularly. Their clothes were decent. Nobody looked hollow-eyed or sun-cooked or like they’d been rationing water for the past week. They looked, in other words, nothing like . I looked like survival.

They’d probably co together, from the sa direction, which ant they knew each other, which probably ant there was sowhere out there that wasn’t the walls and wasn’t the wasteland I’d spent my whole life in. I filed that under also problems for later and kept my face neutral.

"The last one has arrived," said the youngest-looking of the boys, with the satisfied tone of soone checking off a list.

I turned that over in my head. ’The last one. So there was a number. Soone expected a specific headcount.’

The system in my vision offered no comnt on this, which I was starting to recognize as its default personality.

The blonde boy stepped forward. He carried himself the way people do when they’re used to being the one who speaks first, not arrogant exactly, just accustod to it. He looked

over once, quickly, in the way of soone adjusting their expectations in real ti. I couldn’t bla him. I was adjusting mine too.

"Hey," he said. "I’m Max Donman. From Goth." He said it the way people say things that are supposed to an sothing.

Goth. I knew the na. Everyone outside knew the na, the way you know about places you’ll probably never go. A settlent. Structured, protected, not quite walls but not quite nothing. A second tier of survival for people who had enough ability or enough organization to build sothing that held.

’Do people just say where they’re from like that?’ I thought. ’Is that a thing? Are we doing that?’

I beca suddenly, acutely aware that I was from nowhere. Not from a settlent. Not from a protected zone. From the outside, the actual outside, the part of the world that the apocalypse had been given full custody of.

"Abram Nadez," I said, because it was all I had. I didn’t add a location. There wasn’t one worth adding.

Max nodded like that was fine, though I noticed he didn’t push for more. We fell into step together toward the gate, the group absorbing

at the edges the way groups do with strangers, polite but not yet warm.

The walls were right there now, close enough that I could see the seams in the concrete, the dark mouths of the gate chanisms, the caras that had probably been watching us the whole ti.

Apparently the walls had been waiting for a full set. I was the last piece. The gate began to move.

You are reading Harem Apocalypse: Ev Chapter 2: The Last Piece on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading
No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.