
Apocalypse Rebirth: Seven Days to Hoard and Take Revenge
In my past life, the Cerberus strain leaked, turning the world into a blood-soaked hell of rotting flesh and mutated monsters.
I thought my boyfriend Declan and my best friend Hailee would have my back as we fled the quarantine zone.
Instead, when the surging crowd of the infected cornered us, they didn't hesitate.
They shoved me backward into the horde just to buy themselves three seconds to run.
As I fell into the mud, I saw them fleeing without a single backward glance.
"She's dead weight anyway!" Hailee screamed.
"Just keep running, she'll distract them!" Declan yelled back.
I was torn apart, feeling the agonizing tear of rotting teeth sinking into my neck and the hot spray of my own blood.
Before the apocalypse, my greedy uncle had locked away my ten-million-dollar trust fund, leaving me with nothing but a fake boyfriend who only wanted me for my money.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand how the people I loved most could trade my life for a head start.
Why did I blindly trust them? Why didn't I see through their perfectly choreographed lies?
Opening my eyes again, the stench of decaying flesh vanished, replaced by the sterile smell of my college dorm room.
Hailee and Declan were standing over my bed, faking tears of concern over my meningitis fever.
I was back exactly seven days before the world ended, and my spatial vault ability had come back with me.
This time, I'm extorting my uncle for every cent, hoarding the city's supplies, and leaving them all to rot.
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Chapter 2
Cora locked the bathroom door behind her.
She leaned over the marble sink, gripping the edges so hard her knuckles turned white. She turned the faucet on full blast.
The freezing water rushed over her hands. She stared into the mirror, but all she saw were the flashes of the refugee camp. The smell of rotting flesh. The sight of people dying in agony because there wasn't a single dose of antibiotics left in the city.
She looked down at her hands. They were smooth. The massive, jagged scar that had torn through her left palm in her past life was gone.
She closed her eyes and focused.
In her past life, she had awakened a hydrokinesis ability. The military had classified it as a low-level support skill. It was weak, but it was something.
She pushed her focus to the tips of her fingers.
The water running from the faucet stuttered. It was a microscopic pause, but it happened.
Cora's eyes snapped open. She curled her index finger upward.
A single drop of water, the size of a marble, broke away from the stream. It defied gravity, floating silently an inch above her palm.
Her breath hitched in her throat.
The ability had come back with her.
It was tiny, but it meant she wasn't completely defenseless. She flicked her wrist. The water droplet shot forward, hitting the mirror with a soft, wet tap, harmlessly splattering tiny droplets across the smooth glass.
A wave of dizziness hit her. Using the ability this early drained her physical energy fast.
She grabbed a towel, dried her hands roughly, and walked back into the dorm room.
She pulled open the bottom drawer of her desk, bypassing the textbooks, and pulled out a black notebook with a combination lock.
She spun the dials, flipped past the old class notes to a blank page, and grabbed a thick black marker.
She wrote the first word in all caps: FOOD & WATER.
She drew a massive star next to it. She remembered the taste of moldy dog food. She knew exactly what hunger did to the human brain. It turned people into animals.
She wrote the second line: MEDICAL SUPPLIES.
Antibiotics. By the second month of the apocalypse, a single pill was worth more than a gold bar.
She wrote the third line: WEAPONS & DEFENSE.
She needed distance. She couldn't fight infected hand-to-hand, not with her current physical strength.
Cora stared at the list. The ink bled through the paper. She had the knowledge, but she hit a massive, physical wall.
Money.
She opened her laptop and logged into her Bank of America account.
Balance: $3,050.00.
She let out a harsh, mocking laugh.
She had one other card—a black Visa tied to a small emergency account her parents had established before the crash. Harlon didn't know it existed. But when she checked that balance, the number staring back at her was barely four thousand dollars. Combined with her main account, it wouldn't even cover a single pallet of MREs, let alone the arsenal she needed. The trust fund was still the only real answer.
Her eyes drifted to the framed photo on her desk. It was a picture of her parents. Standing behind them was a man in a tailored suit with a fake, tight smile. Her uncle, Harlon.
When her parents died in a car crash, they left behind a ten-million-dollar trust fund. Harlon controlled every single penny of it.
In her past life, she never saw that money. When the world ended, those millions just became useless code on dead servers.
Her brain worked in overdrive, calculating how to pry a massive chunk of cash from a greedy Wall Street shark legally.
Her phone buzzed on the desk.
An iMessage from Hailee lit up the screen: Do you want me to grab you an organic salad from Whole Foods? Love you!
Cora's jaw clenched. She typed back: No thanks. I'm good.
She tossed the phone onto her bed. It bounced on the mattress and slid toward the edge of the pillow, teetering on the edge.
Cora lunged forward to catch it before it hit the floor.
The second her fingertips brushed the cold metal casing of the phone, the air around her hand warped.
It didn't make a sound. There was no flash of light. The phone just ceased to exist in the physical space.
Cora froze. She stayed bent over the bed, her hand still hovering in the empty air. Her heart stopped beating for a full second.
She dropped to her knees. She ripped the blankets off the bed. She crawled under the frame, sweeping her hands over the dusty floorboards.
Nothing.
She sat back on her heels, forcing her breathing to slow down. She closed her eyes and reached inward, trying to find that weird mental pull she had felt the moment the phone vanished.
Deep inside her consciousness, a space opened up.
It was massive, roughly the size of a basketball court. The air inside was gray and completely still.
And right in the center of that void, her iPhone was floating, perfectly suspended in nothingness.
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8.2
For three years, nineteen-year-old Ella Campbell rotted in a freezing psychiatric isolation room.
Her billionaire family didn't visit her once, only pulling her out today to force her to publicly apologize to Ashlyn, the perfect sister who had framed her.
At Ashlyn's glamorous engagement gala, Ella was treated worse than a stray dog and forced to watch her childhood sweetheart propose to her sister.
When Ella showed no jealousy, her brother Ivan dragged her onto a dark balcony and nearly choked her to death.
Her mother didn't even check if Ella was breathing, merely ordering a makeup artist to paint thick concealer over the dark purple handprints on Ella's neck so the family's stock price wouldn't drop.
Standing under the blinding stage lights in a shapeless gray dress, facing three hundred mocking Wall Street executives, Ella was supposed to be the broken, obedient psycho the Campbells needed.
"I am deeply sorry for the pain I caused."
She was supposed to end the apology there and bow to her abusers, but Ella didn't shed a single tear.
"My only regret is that I didn't insist on waiting for the police to arrive that night. I deeply regret that I didn't demand a full, legal toxicology report to prove to everyone exactly what happened."
As the ballroom erupted into suspicious whispers and her paralyzed twin brother finally saw the violent bruises hidden beneath her makeup, Ella's counterattack against the Campbell family officially began.

7.8
My abusive ex was threatening a lawsuit that would destroy my father's career and wipe out my PhD. I was completely out of options.
That night, Graham, the boy from next door I hadn't seen in a decade, showed up at my apartment in the middle of a hurricane. Now a wealthy orthopedic surgeon, he offered a transactional marriage: he needed a local wife to keep his family away while he cared for his sick mother, and in return, he would make my ex disappear.
I thought it was a simple deal. But the morning after we signed the marriage license, Graham didn't just scare my ex off—he ruthlessly dismantled him. Then, Graham turned to me. His eyes were dead as he pulled out his phone, showing me a high-resolution photo of the night I illegally sold lab samples to pay off my ex's initial blackmail. He had hired a private investigator to stalk me. If that photo leaked to the FDA, I wouldn't just lose my degree; I'd go to prison.
"I needed a guarantee," he said flatly.
I was shaking with rage and terror. This wasn't a rescue. It was a hostage situation. Why did he hunt me down? Why use my darkest secret to trap me in this twisted marriage?
I couldn't live like this. I demanded an immediate divorce. But at the courthouse, the clerk dropped a bomb on us: state law required a mandatory thirty-day waiting period. Thirty days trapped with a ruthless, manipulative stranger. I had to find a way to break his leverage before the month was up.

9.6
She was sold as a broodmare. He was a warrior with no memory. Together, they'll burn down the world.
Lyra has been called many things: half-blood, mongrel, dirty blood. Rejected by every pack she's approached, she's given one final chance-as a bride to Ronan, the cruel Alpha of Red River Pack. But when her wedding night becomes a nightmare, she stabs her new husband and flees into the frozen wilderness.
Stellan remembers nothing. Not his name, not his past, not the ancient tattoos covering his body. He only knows that when he sees a terrified woman falling from a cliff into an icy river, he must save her-even if it kills him.
On the run from a vengeful Alpha and his army of hunters, Lyra and Stellan discover an impossible bond growing between them. The moon has chosen them as mates. But Stellan's memories are returning, and with them, a devastating truth: he's not just any wolf. He's the Alpha of the North Star Pack. And a half-blood can never be his Luna.
Now Ronan's brother has sworn revenge, an ancient prophecy awakens, and three packs prepare for war. Lyra must prove that bloodlines mean nothing-and that the most powerful bond of all is forged in ice and fire.
He lost his memory. She lost her freedom. Together, they'll find everything.

9.2
He married her to control her.
To break her.
To own her.
Seraphina let him believe it.
She plays the quiet wife-
soft voice, lowered eyes, perfect obedience.
But behind every smile...
is a plan he was never meant to survive.
Because this marriage was never about love.
Not even power.
It was revenge.
And when Lucien finally uncovers the truth-
when he realizes who she really is...
he won't be fighting to keep her.
He'll be begging to escape her.

9.5
He was born from the void between stars - a being of immense power, forged from cosmic origins.
For thousands of years, he walked among humanity, protecting them and keeping his true strength hidden. After losing the only family he had, grief led him to seek his own end... only to wake up in a world entirely unlike his own.
Here, cultivation is the main path to power. Those who master spirit qi gain superhuman strength, speed, and abilities that place them far above ordinary people. Four great sects rule the land, competing for resources, secrets, and dominance over each other.
Icaros joined the Li Sect, where he found companions he came to trust and care for: the capable and easygoing Li Han, the sharp and composed Su Yan, and the spirited Nelly. For a time, he felt he had found a place to belong, even as he kept his true nature hidden and wondered whether he could ever learn to cultivate like those around him.
Everything changed when their voyage was suddenly attacked. A powerful figure floating in the sky cut their ship apart with sharp, devastating energy strikes, leaving only destruction in his wake. Believing his friends had been lost in the disaster, Icaros chose to stop holding back any longer.
> "I am done hiding!"
He unleashed his full power: golden light blazed from his eyes, he flew at incredible speed, and he broke through every barrier and enemy in his way. On the shores ahead, he tore through hordes of powerful jade monsters, destroying them completely before flying deep into the interior of the island.
Meanwhile, survivors washed up scattered and alone. One young cultivator found himself on the shores of Jade Island - a place most cultivators avoid, as it holds no treasures or useful materials, only danger and endless deposits of ordinary jade. Yet despite the risks, ordinary people have built settlements here, finding safety from the conflicts and power struggles of the outside world.
This island works by different rules. Spirit qi is scarce and unstable, making cultivation far less effective than elsewhere. Instead, the people here rely on advanced technology - weapons and explosives that can injure or even defeat those with great physical strength. Here, skill and preparation can be just as powerful as raw strength, and even the strongest cultivators must move with caution.
Now, Icaros has vanished deep into the island. His companions are lost somewhere across this dangerous land. And the mysterious swordsman who destroyed their ship has already arrived here, searching for an ancient map said to lead to the legacy of a being from another world.
Will they find each other again? And can anyone survive in a place where the usual rules of power no longer hold true?
✅ Chapters 1–19: FREE
🔒 Chapters 20 onwards: PAID
(Continue the journey of power, friendship, and discovery!)

8.9
Ava Kidd just wanted to escape her abusive stepmother when she got drunk at a high-end club and stumbled into the wrong hotel room.
She woke up the next morning in a luxury penthouse, lying naked next to a terrifyingly handsome man covered in her scratch marks.
Recalling rumors of the hotel's secret underground concierge, she immediately assumed she had accidentally slept with an elite male escort.
Desperate to settle the bill, she offered him her only debit card with a pathetic $1,800.
But the man, who was actually Garrison Terry, the ruthless billionaire CEO, was deeply insulted by the cheap plastic.
He trapped her against the bed, coldly demanding a half-million-dollar service fee.
When Ava frantically offered her dead mother's tarnished locket as collateral, he cruelly dismissed it as worthless junk.
Ava was humiliated, her heart pounding with absolute terror.
She didn't understand why this arrogant gigolo was acting like a deranged extortionist, demanding a fortune from a broke girl who had clearly made a mistake.
Furious and refusing to cower, she sneaked out, put on his oversized designer shirt, and aggressively ate his $800 truffle breakfast.
Having no money left, she grabbed her cheap red lipstick, wrote a defiant IOU on his expensive linen napkin, and fled the hotel.
She thought she had escaped a criminal, but upstairs, the billionaire traced her lipstick-stained name with a predatory smile.
"Ava Kidd, I will absolutely find you."