Chapter 66: Power trip
The room they shoved us into was barely bigger than a storage closet.
Concrete walls. A single flickering fluorescent light. No windows. No privacy—just the illusion of it.
I paced.
Back and forth. Back and forth.
My boots scraped against the floor, each step grinding into my nerves. Lila sat on one of the metal chairs, completely detached from the danger around us. Her elbows rested on her knees, hands cupping her cheeks like she was daydreaming in a classroom.
Her face was on fire—an intense, unmistakable blush stretching across her nose and ears.
She looked… happy.
Too happy.
There were no pads. Of course there weren’t.
She was never on her cycle.
The lie sat in my throat like broken glass.
A sudden bang rattled the door.
“YOU GOT TEN MINUTES!” a voice barked from the other side. “THEN YOU AND YOUR GIRLFRIEND ARE GETTIN’ CHECKED TOO!”
My breath hitched.
Girlfriend.
I stared at the door, heart slamming against my ribs, then snapped my gaze back to Lila.
Ten minutes.
I moved fast.
I crossed the room in three strides and crouched in front of her, my hands already checking her jacket, her waistband, her pockets. Too fast. Too frantic.
“Do you have anything on you?” I muttered. “Anything sharp. Anything bloody. A knife—”
With her? You could never tell.
She didn’t resist. Didn’t question it.
If anything, she leaned into my touch.
My hands slid up to her face, thumbs brushing her cheeks as I tilted her head gently but firmly. I forced myself to look— really look—into her eyes.
No redness.
No film.
No signs of infection.
Thank God.
My pulse slowed just a fraction, but the relief didn’t last.
“You called me your girlfriend,” Lila said softly.
Her voice cut through the room like a whisper in a cathedral.
I froze.
“I’m so happy,” she continued, eyes shining—not with fear, not with stress, but with something dangerously close to bliss. “I don’t even care if I die right now.”
My stomach twisted violently.
I looked at her— really looked at her. The way she smiled like this moment meant everything. Like the world ending around us was irrelevant compared to one word leaving my mouth.
Girlfriend.
Something cracked in my chest. Not loudly. Quietly. Like a hairline fracture spreading where it didn’t belong.
“Stop saying stuff like that,” I said, more to myself than to her.
I straightened slowly, hands clenching at my sides.
I wasn’t planning on dying.
And I sure as hell wasn’t going to let her die either.
Not here.
Not like this.
Not while I still had time.
“So much for Texas being a ray of hope…”
Peter muttered, his voice tight with fear and frustration as the line crept forward inch by inch.
The few people who had somehow made it past the checkpoint didn’t calm him at all. If anything, watching them disappear beyond the barricades only made his stomach churn harder.
Aubrey was beside him in an instant.
“What was that?” she asked sharply.
Peter scoffed under his breath. “I said the kid dragged us into this mess. Now he’s off somewhere with that crazy psycho, doing God knows what— probably trying to sneak out without us.”
Aubrey stopped walking.
Her expression hardened, jaw setting like stone.
“If it weren’t for Adrian,” she said coldly, “you, your slut wife, and that mute emo daughter of yours would be dead by now.”
The words landed heavy.
Jane flinched at that, eyes flicking toward Aubrey for just a split second. Aubrey didn’t notice— she was already pressing on.
But Peter did.
“And don’t act like you weren’t the one who sold him on Texas in the first place.”
Peter stiffened. “What? No I didn’t—…”
Aubrey narrowed her eyes.
Peter froze mid-step.
In that instant, it clicked.
Her gaze wasn’t accusing.
It was knowing.
Peter’s breath caught. His eyes widened just a fraction— enough to give him away.
“You spied on us in that tent..” He said quietly.
Before she could respond—
“HEY!” a soldier barked.
The line jolted to a halt.
“What the fuck are you two whisperin’ about?” the man snarled, rifle shifting slightly in his grip.
“Cut it out. Now.”
Silence swallowed them.
Aubrey faced forward again, expression unreadable.
Peter did the same— but his hands were shaking.
And somewhere ahead of them, beyond the barricades and guns and blood-stained pavement, the kid he’d just condemned might have been the only reason they were still alive.
The seconds began to stack.
Not ticking— pressing.
I stood there, staring at the stained concrete wall, and felt something shift behind my eyes. Not panic. Panic was loud. This was quieter. Sharper.
A recalibration.
Ten minutes wasn’t time to escape.
Ten minutes was time to decide who I was going to be.
I exhaled slowly and forced my shoulders to drop.
Pacing wouldn’t help. Looking afraid wouldn’t help. Thinking like prey wouldn’t help.
I stopped moving.
That was the first crack.
I turned back to Lila. She was still smiling, legs swinging faintly like this was a waiting room and not a holding cell that reeked of bleach and old fear.
She thought the lie meant something.
That was the fracture spreading— realizing how easily words could become weapons without ever being meant that way.
I knelt again, slower this time. Controlled.
“Lila,” I said quietly.
Her eyes snapped to me instantly. Laser-focused. Devoted.
I hated how useful that was.
“Listen to me,” I continued, keeping my voice low and even. “When they come back, you don’t speak unless they speak to you. You don’t smile. You don’t cry. You don’t cling to me.”
Her brow furrowed slightly.
“But—”
I raised a finger. Not harsh. Gentle. Like you would with a skittish animal.
“They’re not checking for sickness,” I said. “They’re checking for instability.”
That landed.
I saw it in the way her smile faltered— not gone, but muted. Curious.
“They’re tired,” I went on. “They’ve been yelling all day. Shooting all day. Making calls they don’t want to make. The last thing they want is a scene.”
I leaned closer, lowering my voice further. “So you give them nothing.”
Lila nodded slowly.
Good.
Too good.
I stood and scanned the room again, but this time not as a prisoner.
As a stage.
One door. No camera that I could see—if there was one, it would be obvious. Soldiers liked to be seen watching. It scared people into behaving.
No medical supplies inside. Which meant if they wanted a check, they’d have to move us.
Movement created gaps.
Gaps created errors.
I dragged one of the metal chairs closer to Lila, positioning it at an angle—protective, but not possessive. Subtle difference. One screamed threat. The other screamed responsibility.
I sat.
Not beside her.
Slightly in front.
A shield.
The door opened earlier than expected.
Two soldiers stepped in. Same uniforms. Different energy.
The first one was young. Rifle held too tight. Eyes darting. New. Afraid. He’d follow rules to the letter.
The second was older. Beard. Tired eyes. His rifle hung lower. He was already thinking about the next twelve hours.
I focused on him.
Always focus on the one who doesn’t want to be here.
The younger one spoke first. “Alright. Stand up. We’re doing a quick—”
“She’s bleeding,” I said calmly.
Both of them paused.
I didn’t raise my voice. Didn’t rush the words. I let them sit in the air like a liability.
The older soldier’s eyes flicked to Lila. Then back to me.
“Cycle,” I added. “Heavy.”
The younger one grimaced. “That’s not—”
“You got gloves?” I asked, tilting my head. Not confrontational. Just… practical.
Silence.
I watched the older soldier’s jaw tighten.
I pressed gently. “Look, I get it. You’ve got procedures. But if she’s infected and you bring her through that checkpoint without proper screening, that’s on you. And if she’s not—”
I shrugged.
“—you just contaminated your own space for no reason.”
The word contaminated did the work for me.
The older soldier exhaled through his nose. “We don’t have med clearance in here.”
“I know,” I said. “That’s why I said she needs to be seen by someone who does.”
I didn’t say you should take us to medical.
I let him say it to himself.
The younger soldier shifted uncomfortably. “Sir—”
“Do you want to deal with this?” the older one snapped back, irritation flashing. “Or do you want to pass it off?”
That was it.
I felt something inside me settle into place.
A click.
The older soldier looked at me again, really looked this time. Not as a problem.
As paperwork.
“Any symptoms besides bleeding?” he asked.
“No fever,” I said immediately. “No eye discoloration. No tremors.”
I watched his eyebrows lift just slightly.
He hadn’t expected that.
“I’ve been monitoring her,” I added. “I know what to look for.”
That was the second fracture— realizing how easy it was to sound convincing when you knew what people were afraid of.
He nodded once. “Alright.”
The younger soldier opened his mouth.
“Go get wipes,” the older one ordered. “And radio medical. I want this logged as a transfer.”
Transfer.
Not execution. Not screening.
A delay.
The younger soldier hesitated— then obeyed.
The door shut again.
I stayed seated until the footsteps faded.
Only then did my hands start shaking.
I clenched them together, knuckles whitening, breathing slow and measured as something ugly and cold curled in my chest.
I’d enjoyed it.
Not the danger.
The control.
I looked at Lila.
She was staring at me like I’d hung the sun in the sky.
“You’re amazing,” she whispered.
Something inside me recoiled.
Something else stayed very, very still.
“This isn’t over,” I said quietly. “Do you understand?”
She nodded eagerly.
I looked away.
Ten minutes had turned into leverage.
And I wasn’t sure anymore whether that terrified me—
or whether it came far too naturally.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 173: When It Breaks
- Chapter 172: Say It Out Loud
- Chapter 171: Real small world, huh?
- Chapter 170: Couldn’t get enough of me, could you?
- Chapter 169: Don’t be a fool
- Chapter 168: Signal
- Chapter 167: Human or Not?
- Chapter 166: And then there was two
- Chapter 165: Final Warning
- Chapter 164: Livestock
- Chapter 163: Here’s the real welcome
- Chapter 162: The buzz that never stops
- Chapter 161: What Mrs. Graham said
- Chapter 160: The Quiet Game
- Chapter 159: Western Intake Sector Three
- Chapter 158: The Great Land of Maple Leaf
- Chapter 157: Just the way things go, I guess
- Chapter 156: I’m Not Who You Pretend I Am
- Chapter 155: Are you proud of yourself?
- Chapter 154: That could’ve gone better
- Chapter 153: Ready or not
- Chapter 152: Selective emphathy
- Chapter 151: Everyone hates Adrian
- Chapter 150: What now?
- Chapter 149: Stalker
- Chapter 148: You’re too close for comfort
- Chapter 147: A ticking time bomb
- Chapter 146: Let me breathe
- Chapter 145: You move quick, don’t you?
- Chapter 144: Won’t be the last
- Chapter 143: I know who you really are
- Chapter 142: You’re not dead
- Chapter 141: The lie that changed everything
- Chapter 140: Nothing to look back to
- Chapter 139: Scars fade but never go
- Chapter 138: Let me in
- Chapter 137: Family matters
- Chapter 136: Ugly
- Chapter 135: If im being honest
- Chapter 134: I hope you rot too
- Chapter 133: The road ahead
- Chapter 132: They fall twice as hard
- Chapter 131: Just like the rest of us
- Chapter 130: A room full of twitching bodies
- Chapter 129: Shitty people
- Chapter 128: It’s just a dream, right?
- Chapter 127: With one eye open
- Chapter 126: Not at all what I thought it’d be
- Chapter 125: Solace in my Glock
- Chapter 124: The stench that follows you everywhere
- Chapter 123: always a step ahead
- Chapter 122: The hunted
- Chapter 121: Cold feet
- Chapter 120: It’s over
- Chapter 119: Blood on my hands
- Chapter 118: You can’t go back, Adrian
- Chapter 117: I can burn hotter
- Chapter 116: I’m so sorry
- Chapter 115: I’m sorry
- Chapter 114: Closure
- Chapter 113: Unfamiliar
- Chapter 112: The day everything fell
- Chapter 111: From Missouri to Texas
- Chapter 110: Saints
- Chapter 109: Blood and Shame
- Chapter 108: Unhashed wounds
- Chapter 107: How it was always meant to be
- Chapter 106: Witch
- Chapter 105: Fucking freak
- Chapter 104: Annie and Yas
- Chapter 103: A quiet building
- Chapter 102: Friends and enemies
- Chapter 101: Jealousy
- Chapter 100: Clarity
- Chapter 99: Anarchy
- Chapter 98: Don’t leave me
- Chapter 97: Withdrawal
- Chapter 96: Southern hospitality
- Chapter 95: Mine, not yours
- Chapter 94: Monster
- Chapter 93: By any means possible
- Chapter 92: No right
- Chapter 91: Sweet, loving city I left behind
- Chapter 90: Deep shit
- Chapter 89: Nothing to gain
- Chapter 88: Like moths to a flame
- Chapter 87: April 5, 2017
- Chapter 86: Amber Society
- Chapter 85: Look at the flowers
- Chapter 84: Semblance of normalcy
- Chapter 83: The winning side
- Chapter 82: Just inconvenience
- Chapter 81: Flickering red haze
- Chapter 80: Not dead yet
- Chapter 79: Easy street
- Chapter 78: No one’s coming to save you
- Chapter 77: Anomaly
- Chapter 76: Do what we do best
- Chapter 75: And the second
- Chapter 74: Dust and ash
- Chapter 73: The first crack
- Chapter 72: Throatburn
- Chapter 71: Charity service
- Chapter 70: Obedience
- Chapter 69: A sense of safety
- Chapter 68: The future is bright
- Chapter 67: Brain shortage
- Chapter 66: Power trip
- Chapter 65: Everything to loose
- Chapter 64: A deadly road trip’s end
- Chapter 63: Sleepless nights
- Chapter 62: Delusions of the heart
- Chapter 61: Not the Lily I remember
- Chapter 60: Uglier than I remember
- Chapter 59: We own this city
- Chapter 58: Mind Fractures
- Chapter 57: Compliance is key
- Chapter 56: Different ball park
- Chapter 55: A strand of blonde hair
- Chapter 54: Ego driven
- Chapter 53: Blonde hair, blue streak
- Chapter 52: Control freak
- Chapter 51: Maybe it’s better like this
- Chapter 50: Who’s the real predator?
- Chapter 49: Tick Tock
- Chapter 48: Rely on just me
- Chapter 47: Do you miss me yet?
- Chapter 46: Route 66
- Chapter 45: Point of no return
- Chapter 44: Closer than you think
- Chapter 43: Greater Good
- Chapter 42: It keeps us alive
- Chapter 41: Do we really?
- Chapter 40: Talk, damn you.
- Chapter 39: The morning after
- Chapter 38: Flaming desperation
- Chapter 37: Fault Lines
- Chapter 36: Actions speak louder
- Chapter 35: Fear the infected
- Chapter 34: A river in Egypt
- Chapter 33: For my own good!?!?
- Chapter 32: Reality hits hard like fuck
- Chapter 31: Sleeptalkers
- Chapter 30: Wake up call
- Chapter 29: Like flies to rotten meat
- Chapter 28: Spiderweb
- Chapter 27: City of sorrow
- Chapter 26: Not much to loose
- Chapter 25: Made violent
- Chapter 24: A glimmer of hope
- Chapter 23: Not the bang you wanted?
- Chapter 22: Murderer Douchebag
- Chapter 21: Fine, damn it.
- Chapter 20: You’re safe now
- Chapter 19: Fucking blonde women
- Chapter 18: True nature
- Chapter 17: I can behave
- Chapter 16: Miss Bubblegum
- Chapter 15: Lawless land
- Chapter 14: What lies ahead
- Chapter 13: Maybe a little crazy
- Chapter 12: What they become
- Chapter 11: Train Tracks
- Chapter 10: Ex for a reason
- Chapter 9: Animals
- Chapter 8: New Jersey
- Chapter 7: This isn’t a date, right?
- Chapter 6: Collateral Damage
- Chapter 5: The Grahams make me sick.
- Chapter 4: Forks and knives
- Chapter 3: Goodbye Englewood
- Chapter 2: Are you serious?
- Chapter 1: Damn it all to hell.