Chapter 1
I lay in the corridor, my back pressed to the freezing tile, eyes locked on the fire door that led to the roof.
Three meters.
Only three meters between me and it.
On the other side was wind, the glare of a searchlight, the hammering roar of helicopter blades—an escape route. But the door was shut. A moment ago it had clicked—clack—and been dead-bolted from the inside, as if they were afraid filth like me might crawl in during the chaos.
They’d gone up. All of them.
Three minutes earlier, footsteps had surged upward like a tide. Some of them had even stepped on me as they ran past. The rescue was here—who would turn back for a man face-down on the floor, beaten until he couldn’t move? They had only instinct left: faster, faster, don’t fall behind.
I tried to lift a hand to pound the door. The instant I moved, my ribs felt pried apart. Pain blackened my vision; blood foam rose in my throat.
From down the stairs came a rasping howl.
Zombies. They were coming.
I stared at the strip of light leaking through the crack, but my head felt like it was splitting open—rage. The fire surged up from my gut, pressing into my chest until it felt like it would burn straight through my heart.
I had yanked this building back from the edge of collapse with my bare hands—right up to this moment. And in return, they’d beaten me into this shape, tossed me in the stairwell like garbage, then turned around and ran to snatch a spot on the lifeline.
My teeth shook with hatred. I wanted to kick that door open, drag every last one of them back, pin them to this corridor one by one, make them taste what it meant to be abandoned.
But I couldn’t move.
My name is Ethan Gray. I lived on the sixteenth floor of Silver Bay Apartments.
Silver Bay wasn’t some run-down mixed-use block. It was a new district “young professionals” complex—twenty-four stories, two elevators, one fire stairwell. About fifty residents, almost all young: investment banking analysts, fitness trainers, bartenders, nurses, programmers, and a few interns fresh to the city. No elderly. No kids.
The hallways used to smell like coffee, perfume, and gym disinfectant. No one would’ve believed it could become a slaughterhouse.
The day the apocalypse began, everything was normal until noon.
I’d just come back from the supermarket with bread and canned food when, across the street, someone tackled a passerby and bit down. A bystander rushed in to pull them off—his wrist was bitten clean through. Blood sprayed. He screamed and staggered back, and within seconds his eyes went empty—
—and he lunged at the next person.
That was when I understood: this wasn’t a riot. It was infection.
Over the next three days, the city was like a power switch had been cut.
Sirens blared for a while, then died. Phone signals came and went. The internet filled with clips—“biting,” “out of control,” “lockdown.” People watched from windows as cars crashed into each other, as crowds ran screaming, as bodies got back up off the pavement and kept walking.
The building split.
One side insisted we should “break out while there’s still time”—stay here and we’d die. The other side insisted we should “lock down and hold”—go outside and we’d die for sure. They screamed red-faced at each other, neither willing to yield. No one wanted to be the villain who gave orders, because giving orders meant owning the consequences.
I did it.
On the third night, I dug out a shortwave radio. I’d bought it for camping, just to try my luck. But I actually caught a broken broadcast: infection spreading, survivors should shelter in place, occupy sturdy buildings and high ground—air extraction in one month.
One month.
When I said that out loud, someone laughed on the spot. “A month? You want us to chew the walls?”
I didn’t waste time explaining. I slammed the plan on the table:
Seal every ground-floor entrance and set observation points. No unauthorized outings. Register and ration food and water. Rotating shifts to guard doors and the stairwell. Any bite or scratch—immediate quarantine.
Not because I enjoyed controlling people, but because I could see the outcome. In a building like this, all it took was one impulsive idiot opening a door—and we were finished.
For those days I ran up and down like a madman.
I knocked door to door, inventoried whatever supplies we could count; led people to haul everything we could from the gym storage room and the public vending area; sent anyone handy to inspect the backup generator and water tanks; personally watched the ground floor barricades and oversaw the iron grates nailed into the stairwell.
They called me a dictator. They said I was insane. But they still did it. Because outside, people died every day—too fast, too cheap—cheap enough that no one dared bet their life on “freedom.”
I’m no savior.
I was just cold enough, ruthless enough, and clear-headed enough to understand: order is worth more than kindness.
The first two weeks held.
Everyone had a little—pitifully little—but at least no one starved that day. They took turns guarding until their eyes were bloodshot. The building didn’t collapse. No matter how the world screamed outside, we were still alive.
The ones who’d cursed me as a “dictator” began to accept my rules—because rules gave them certainty. It made them feel like they weren’t waiting to die, but “holding on.”
I thought I’d won.
But in the third week, things started to rot.
Food dwindled. Water dwindled. After the power died, night became a black well and time stretched until it drove you mad. Worse—people started tallying that pain onto my name. Because I was the one who made them stay. I was the one who told them to wait a month. I was the one who said rescue was coming.
Hope is like that: when it’s delivered, you’re a benefactor. When it falls through, you’re a criminal.
That was when Claire began—quietly—turning the wind.
Claire was my girlfriend. Or rather, my ex. Before the outbreak we’d been talking about travel and work. Then I found out she’d already been with Mason. The apocalypse tore every disguise away; she didn’t even bother pretending. She just stood openly at Mason’s side.
Mason lived a few floors below us. A fitness trainer. He and Claire had “met in the elevator”—I used to think that sounded ridiculous. Now I realize ridiculous was their natural habitat.
Claire never confronted me head-on. She’d just float questions into the crowd, light as feathers: “Why does Ethan get to do the dividing? Can’t we vote?” She looked innocent saying it, as if she truly wanted fairness—while each word told everyone the same thing: I was controlling them.
Mason was more direct. He spread doubt, hinted that I’d hidden supplies, hinted I liked being the leader, hinted “we should try another way.” He didn’t need proof. He only needed to light the fire—when people are hungry, they love conspiracies.
I saw it all. I held it down.
Because I only wanted to last until Day 30.
I told myself: once the helicopter arrives, everything ends. They’ll know I didn’t lie. They’ll know I did it so we could live. Then they can settle accounts, curse me, whatever—they can do anything. I wouldn’t care.
Only then did I learn I’d expected human nature to be reasonable.
At noon on Day 30, the helicopter didn’t come.
Not at twelve.
Not at twelve-thirty.
With every passing minute the air in the building tightened another notch. Someone clenched their jaw. Someone began to cry. Someone paced the hallway. The fire we’d held down for a month finally found its outlet—
Me.
“You said today!”
“You said you heard the broadcast!”
“It’s been a month, Ethan! A month!”
I told them to wait.
That was all I said, and Mason’s fist smashed into my face.
Not a warning. A sentence.
He yanked me out of the crowd. At first some people hesitated, but the moment the first person struck, the rest moved too. They needed someone to carry the blame, someone to take the beating, so they could believe they weren’t stupid—only deceived.
They hit me and shouted that I never should’ve made everyone stay, that breaking out might’ve found rescue, that now there were more zombies than before and it was too late to leave. They said I’d hidden supplies, that was why I’d never looked scared.
I tried to run for the roof—escape their fists first. Mason drove a boot into my ribs and I rolled down the stairs, pain so sharp I nearly passed out.
Someone bent back my fingers. Someone stomped on my head. Someone grabbed my hair and smashed my face into the floor. The edge of the tile tore skin away. My mouth filled with the taste of iron.
A full hour.
Then the rotor roar came.
The crowd froze like someone hit pause. For a ridiculous second, I felt a spark of hope—that someone might haul me up, even just drag me a few feet so I could go too.
But no one did.
They looked at me the way you look at a corpse—confirmed I wouldn’t stand up and block their path—then turned and ran. Screams, cheers, sobs all tangled together as everyone stampeded to the roof, hungry for the last bite of meat.
The fire door swung shut behind them.
Locked.
Dead-bolted.
The very door in front of me now.
I trembled with rage, jaw clacking, hatred jammed in my chest until I could barely breathe.
At the stairwell entrance, a zombie shambled into the corridor. It dragged itself forward, head tilted, as if listening to my heartbeat. It came closer and closer; each scrape of its feet on tile ground at my nerves.
I forced my body up with everything I had. My palm slipped in blood; I made it halfway, then collapsed again. The door was in front of me. The light was in front of me. The way out was in front of me—
—and I didn’t even have the strength to crawl those last three meters.
I wanted to roar, to curse, to throw every debt from that month back in their faces.
But my throat could only bubble blood.
The second before the zombie hit me, I stared at the strip of light leaking through the crack, and only one sentence remained in my mind—not a conclusion, but a venomous vow:
If I ever get another chance, I will never stick my neck out again.
Darkness came down.
The next instant, I sucked in air like a drowning man and sat bolt upright in bed, chest heaving, coughing until I couldn’t stop.
Sunlight outside was blinding. Traffic on the street below flowed steady. A distant siren flashed once and vanished. The world hadn’t rotted yet. My fingers were intact. My ribs didn’t hurt. My face wasn’t swollen.
My phone screen was lit.
The date read: the day before the apocalypse.
I stared at it, slowly tightening my fist until my knuckles went white.
I got out of bed, walked to the window, and looked down at a street that hadn’t been painted with blood yet. My voice was low, like passing judgment on myself:
“This time, I’m not doing anything.”
If they want to run out, run out.
If they want to hold the building, hold it.
But if they want to shove the responsibility onto me—
In their dreams.
