The days started blurring together as I continued to check things off my list.
I checked my phone again, wishing the time away while at the same time, wishing that it would slow down... but no, it was April 3rd, and that dated wasnāt going to change.
The apocalypse would begin on May 6th which meant that I had thirty-three days left. I had already been at this for four weeks, and my spatial storage was not showing any signs of becoming too full.
I had more than enough rice, canned goods, frozen foods, meats, sweets, snacks, and cooking oil to feed myself for years if not decades. It really depended on how well I could ration everything.
Then again, I still had over a month, and I wasnāt done yet. After all, I had no desire to ration my food. What was the point of surviving if I had to eat like I was still scraping by?
No, I was going to take even more things. It wouldnāt bother me at all if I didnāt leave enough for the next person.
They should have been faster.
But the countdown was real. Every morning I woke up, checked the date, and felt the number shrink. Thirty-three days. Then thirty-two. Then thirty-one.
April was flying by, and I could feel it slipping away, each day disappearing faster than the last.
The initial phaseāthe planning, the first few runsāhad felt manageable, but now it felt like I was racing against something I couldnāt quite catch.
I wasnāt panicking. Panic was useless. But I also refused to slow down.
Because the truth was, Iād filled most of my storage space so far with food, and I still had a list of things I needed that were significantly harder to acquire.
Medical supplies.
Weapons.
The kind of things that didnāt just sit on grocery store shelves waiting for someone with a spatial storage ability to walk by and take them.
Thirty-three days. It sounded like enough time until it didnāt.
So I kept moving.
The routine settled in quickly.
Every morning, Iād come downstairs, eat breakfastāusually something Xu Zhenlanās housekeeper had prepared, because apparently rich people didnāt cook for themselves unless it was a special occasionāand then Zhou Chenghai would appear in the doorway, his arms crossed, looking like heād rather be anywhere else.
"Where to today?" heād ask, his tone flat.
"Surprise me," Iād reply with a shrug, just to watch his jaw tighten.
He never did surprise me. He drove me to malls, grocery stores, warehouse clubsāplaces where a twenty-year-old girl with too much money and no supervision could wander around buying things without raising suspicion.
He followed me through the aisles, standing far enough back that it didnāt look like he was babysitting me, but close enough that I knew he was watching.
Iād buy things. Normal things. Clothes, snacks, toiletries. Enough to make it look like I was just shopping, just being the spoiled niece everyone expected me to be. And then, when no one was looking, Iād take everything else.
Entire shelves of canned goods. Pallets of bottled water. Freezers full of meat. Iād stand in front of a display, pretending to read a label, and pull everything behind me into the spatial storage.
No one ever noticed. The cameras didnāt catch it. The employees didnāt see it. I was a ghost, and I was taking everything.
By the time we got back to the house in the evening, Zhou Chenghai would report to Xu Zhenlan that Iād "behaved normally," which was technically true. I hadnāt caused a scene. I hadnāt done anything illegal that anyone could prove. Iād just been shopping.
Xu Zhenlan would nod, go back to his calls or his paperwork, and Iād disappear into my room to update my lists.
The house was starting to feel familiar. Not homeāI didnāt believe in that anymoreābut close enough that I almost considered fighting for it.
I knew which stairs creaked. I knew where the housekeeper kept the good snacks. I knew that Xu Zhenlan worked late most nights, and that Zhou Chenghaiās shift ended at 10 PM, and that the security system had a blind spot near the east wing that I could exploit if I ever needed to.
The biggest problem I was having was that Zhou Chenghai was getting suspicious.
I could tell by the way he watched me.
Not obviouslyāhe was too professional for thatābut Iād spent ten years in an apocalypse learning to read people, and Zhou Chenghai was an open book. He didnāt like me. He couldnāt figure me out. And that bothered him.
Which made messing with him incredibly entertaining.
"Are you following me because youāre bored?" I asked one afternoon, pausing in the middle of a department store to look back at him. "Because if you are, I can recommend some hobbies. Knitting, maybe. Scrapbooking. I hear lots of old men take up golf, you can try that, too."
His expression didnāt change. "Iām doing my job."
"Your job is to make sure I donāt get kidnapped," I replied with a grin even as I took more stuff into my space. "Iām in a department store in broad daylight. Whoās going to kidnap me? The mannequins?"
"Youād be surprised."
I smirked at him and kept walking, deliberately taking a detour through the shoe section just to make him follow me. I picked up a pair of six-inch stilettosābright red, completely impractical, the kind of thing Iād never wear in a million yearsāand held them up.
"What do you think?" I asked. "Too much?"
Zhou Chenghai stared at me. "Youāre not buying those."
"Why not? Theyāre cute."
"You canāt walk in those."
"You donāt know that."
"Iāve seen you trip over flat ground."
I gasped, mock-offended. "That was one time. And there was a crack in the sidewalk."
He didnāt respond, but I saw the corner of his mouth twitch. Just barely. I counted it as a win.
I bought the shoes anyway, just to see his reaction. He didnāt say anything, but the look he gave me as I handed them to the cashier was worth every yuan.
The thing about Zhou Chenghai was that he knew something was up, but he couldnāt prove anything. I never did anything obviously wrong. I never acted surprised when things happened. I never asked questions I shouldnāt know the answers to. I was just... calm. Unbothered. Like Iād already seen everything before.
Which, technically, I had.
But he didnāt know that. He just knew that something about me didnāt add up, and it was driving him crazy.
Good. Let him wonder.
Xu Zhenlan, on the other hand, wasnāt annoying.
He didnāt hover. He didnāt ask where I was going or what I was buying. He didnāt demand explanations or try to manage my decisions. He just let me exist, which was rare enough that I noticed it.
It was almost cute, in a detached way.
If he wasnāt going to be dead in thirty some odd days, I might have actually enjoyed his company more. As it was, he was fine for the time beingālow maintenance, undemanding, the kind of person who made waiting easier.
Heād also stopped bringing up Aspen, which helped.
I didnāt know if heād finally accepted that I didnāt care, or if heād just given up. Either way, it worked.
By the third week, Iād hit a problem.
Food was easy. I could walk into any grocery store, any warehouse club, any market, and take whatever I wanted. Spatial storage didnāt care about weight or volumeāit just swallowed everything I fed it, and Iād been feeding it a lot.
But medical supplies were different.
I needed antibiotics. Surgical kits. Disinfectant. Painkillers. IV supplies. Bandages. The kind of things that would keep me alive if I got injured, if I got sick, if something went wrong and I couldnāt just wait it out.
Grocery stores didnāt carry most of that. Pharmacies had some of it, but their inventory was limited, and stealing from one would be too obvious. I needed bulk. I needed variety. I needed enough to last years.
Which meant hospitals.
I spent an entire evening researching hospital supply chains, security systems, inventory management. Hospitals kept detailed records. They had cameras everywhere. They had staff working around the clock. Stealing from one would attract attention immediately.
But stealing from several...
That might work.
If I hit multiple hospitals across the city, took small amounts from each, spread it out over days or weeks, I could probably get what I needed without triggering any alarms. It would take time. It would take planning. But it was doable.
I added it to my list.
And then there were the weapons.
I didnāt need them immediately. I wasnāt planning to fight my way through the apocalypseāI was planning to hide from it, to lock myself in this mansion and wait for the worst of it to pass. But I also wasnāt stupid. Weapons were insurance. Weapons were backup. Weapons were leverage.
And there was a warehouse on the outskirts of the city that had everything I needed.
Iād found it by accident, scrolling through forums and black market listings late one night. Someone had mentioned it in passingāa triad-controlled warehouse, fully stocked, used for smuggling and storage. The post had been deleted within hours, but Iād already saved the address.
I didnāt know who owned it. Just that it belonged to a triad leader, someone powerful enough that people didnāt talk about him openly. That was fine. I didnāt need to know his name. I just needed to know where his weapons were.
I started mapping it out.
Security camerasāhow many, where they were positioned, what angles they covered. Guardsāhow many, what shifts they worked, whether they patrolled or stayed stationary. Access pointsādoors, windows, vents, anything I could use to get in and out without being seen.
I pulled up satellite images, street views, building layouts. I cross-referenced them with forum posts, news articles, anything that mentioned the area. I built a mental map of the entire block, every entrance and exit, every blind spot.
The plan was simple: get in, take everything, get out. No confrontation. No evidence. Just like every other heist Iād pulled.
The hard part was timing.
I needed to do it before the apocalypse started, because once the world collapsed, leaving the house would be impossible. The streets would be flooded with zombies. The city would be a death trap. Iād have one chance to get this right, and if I missed it, Iād be stuck without weapons for at least a year.
Maybe longer.
I stared at the map on my laptop screen, tracing the route from the mansion to the warehouse and back. Forty minutes, if traffic was light. An hour, if it wasnāt.
I could do this.
I just needed to pick the right night.
I leaned back in my chair, checking my phone one more time.
Thirty-three days left.
Plenty of time to get everything done.
Right?