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Sarah should have been. The indentation of her body remained, faint as a fading dream, but the warmth had vanished entirely. No residual heat. No lin
artment walls as if the building itself had forgotten how to echo. He said it again, lou
ime. Sarah's cherished wall clock from their Paris trip, the one she'd haggled for in a tiny Montmartre shop, stood motionless on the shelf. Its hands pointed accusingly at the m
's lipstick. A half-read novel lay open on the couch, her bookmark-a pressed wildflower from their last hike-tucked carefully at page 247. He picked it up, fingers tracing the delicate petals, and felt his throat
rally be the only
ke a brooding novelist who never actually wrote. He slipped the Paris pocket watch into his pocket, a sma
The young couple with the golden retriever. The reclusive writer on the fourth floor. No answers. No shuffling footsteps. No irritated voices tel
inent above an article titled "Global Vanishings Defy Explanation." A child's red backpack rested near the elevators, crayons scattered like colorful
tillness. New York, the city that nev
n with its meter still running, the fare frozen at $12.75. Traffic lights continued their patient cycles-green, yellow, red-directing traffic for gh
– INITIALIZAT
d alien: the corner bodega with its door propped open, fresh bagels visible in the display case; the park where he and Sarah had picnicked just last weekend, blan
coffee. The old woman who fed pigeons every dawn. His voice carried down empty avenues and returned
.Ada
soft and intimate, carrying the cadence of his own voice. Or Sarah's? He couldn't be sure.
owing reports of disappearances. Two Humvees sat abandoned, doors open, keys still in the ignitions. Adam approache
ive on a metal field desk, casting a pale glow across scat
yed a clean, clas
JECT
Selective P
VIVOR
: ADAM
ONE – STAT
om eight billion souls. Why him? What made Adam Kane-the moderately successful architect, the man who
y before the screen went black with a final, decisive click. The generat
-the entire vault of heaven was a smooth, bruised violet expanse, empty and wrong. The moon hung low and unnaturally large, its familiar craters distorted by sharp, deliberate l
ut her, the weight of the empty world pressed down on him with physical force. He remembered their last conversation-the way she'd kissed him go
wrapped in familiarity. A playground where swings moved gently in nonexistent wind. An open bookstore with bestsell
– SURVIVORS:
ling of being watched never left him. It prickled at the base of his neck, whispered across his skin. Occasionally, he caught movement
e. His own voice, layered and distant, calling from multi
existence had crystallized: the apocalypse had not been random. It had been deliberate.
ings with impossible speed, flowers bloomed in sidewalk cracks with vibrant defiance. Nature wa
lowered the bat and st
was truly gone or simply... elsewhere. But as the weight of an empty plane
whatever had engineered this sil

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