The smell wasn't of garbage and despair. It was the smell of disinfectant and floor wax.
A wave of nausea washed over her. Her stomach tightened, forming a painful knot. She wasn't dead. She was in a hospital room. Sterling City Memorial Hospital.
She recognized the room.
She recognized this day.
The end of the world is coming.
One month. She only has one month left before the world begins to fall apart.
"Elena, are you hearing me?" Grandma Tucker's face hovered above her, wearing an impatient mask. Her thin lips were pressed into a straight line of displeasure. "Brandi needs this."
Bone Marrow Donation Consent Form. The handwriting was blurry, but she knew what it said.
In her past life, she signed the agreement, and in the end, she died a gruesome death.
"Your cousin is sick, Elena." Uncle Dale stood at the foot of the bed, his arms crossed over his barrel-shaped chest.
He was using his 'reasonable patriarchal' voice, the kind he always used before making demands. 'It's your duty. Blood is thicker than water.'
Blood. The word made her stomach churn again.
Her blood. The blood they wanted to take, drain, and use.
This donation will destroy her immune system, leaving her vulnerable and helpless when heat waves hit and the power grid collapses, bringing an apocalyptic scenario.
The memory is so vivid, like a physical blow. Fever, weakness-her body was completely robbed of its vitality when the apocalypse came.
It's all because of this. Because of them.
A chill, unrelated to illusory memories, seeped deep into her chest. It dispelled fear and confusion. It was a hard, sharp clarity.
"No."
The word was uttered hoarsely, as if torn from a throat parched from long silence. It was soft, but its impact in the quiet room was like a gunshot.
Grandma Tucker's jaw dropped. For a second, she looked genuinely shocked, her carefully constructed mask of family concern slipping away to reveal naked greed beneath.
Then came anger.
"What did you say?!" she shrieked, her voice rising to a pitch that made Elena's teeth ache. "After all we've done for you! You ungrateful brat! You have to sign it, or you're no longer part of this family!"
Dale's wife, Brenda, slowly stepped forward. Her eyes were already red-rimmed, a practiced performance of grief. She grasped Elena's hand. Her grip was surprisingly strong, her nails digging slightly into Elena's skin.
"Please, Elena," she whispered, her voice hoarse from feigned tears. "Think of Brandy. She's so young. She has a lifetime ahead of her."
Elena looked at Brenda's meticulously made-up, sorrowful face. Another memory surfaced.
In her past life, all Elena had left was a loaf of bread, her last food. Brenda's hand snatched it away. As Elena collapsed from hunger, a triumphant and ugly smile appeared on her face.
A dark yet satisfying thought began to take root in Elena's cold heart: revenge.
She pulled her hand away from Brenda's grasp.
Her gaze swept across the room and landed on the nurse call button. She pressed it hard.
"I'm thirsty," Elena said, her voice now a little stronger. "I need a nurse. And some water."
The interruption threw them off balance. Dale and Brenda exchanged a glance, a hint of annoyance mixed with something else flashing across their faces. A sense of smugness.
"Your parents are having a great time in Europe," Brenda said, her tone shifting to casual conversation. "If you don't sign soon, I can't guarantee I'll still be able to take care of you."
That's it. It's confirmed. They planned all of this. Then, when her parents, Robert and Helen, were abroad and unreachable, they isolated her.
A nurse, a kind-faced woman with a name tag that read Reynolds, entered the room. "Is everything alright here?"
"I just need some water, thank you," Elena said, her eyes fixed on the nurse. A silent plea.
As Nurse Reynolds turned to get water from the kettle on the counter, Elena's gaze quickly fell on the small medical tray on the bedside table. A pair of stainless steel surgical scissors lay next to a roll of duct tape.
With a barely perceptible movement, she nudged the table with her elbow. The scissors slipped from the tray and fell silently into the folds of her blanket. Her fingers grasped the cold metal.
She felt her body weaken, and the persistent pain of an illness they might have exaggerated to bring her here. This body was no longer the ravaged, emaciated form of her former life. It was soft. Fragile. They had always treated her as a resource. A blood bag. A spare part.
Nurse Reynolds handed her the cup. The cold plastic felt so solid and real in her hands.
"About that tour group in Europe," Elena said, her gaze crossing the rim of her glass to meet Dale's. "The one you booked for them. I heard there was a huge transport strike in France. Are they stuck?"
The smug look on Dale's face vanished. His eyes widened in genuine surprise. "How could you...?"
He must be wondering how she knew.
He had sabotaged her parents' relationship.
Grandma Tucker, seeing her advantage slipping away, charged forward again. She was tired of trying to persuade her.
"Stop talking nonsense, just sign it!" she hissed, grabbing Elena's wrist. Her fingers were rough and strong, like eagle claws.
The touch was like an electric shock. A pure, undiluted current of fear instantly coursed through Elena's body. The feeling of being shoved. The feeling of falling into the snow. The feeling of giving up.
Don't let it happen again.
I will never come again.
A force she had never noticed before surged through her limbs. It was the power of a trapped beast.
She gave it a sudden shove.
With all the strength of her resurrected life and all the anger of her stolen life, she gave it a powerful push.
Grandma Tucker staggered backward, tripped over her own foot, and fell heavily and undignifiedly to the ground.
silence.
Dale and Brenda were stunned, first looking at their fallen matriarch, then at Elena, who was now sitting even straighter, the blanket concealing the scissors clutched tightly in her hand. A mask of indifference clung to her face.
The weak, submissive niece was gone. Looking back at them was a stranger.
Dale's face turned purple with rage. He took a step forward, his voice low and menacing. "You little bitch. You'll regret this. I'll make sure you can't even find a job cleaning toilets in this city."
Elena took a slow, long sip of water. The liquid soothed her throat. In her past life, she had dreamed of water. She had begged for water. She had fought for water. Now, she would guard her resources as fiercely as a dragon.
She saw Brenda give Dale a barely perceptible nod, her gaze flicking towards Elena. A silent command. Hold her down.
Elena gripped the scissors even tighter.
"Enough!" Grandma Tucker screamed, struggling to her feet. "I'll count to three. One...two..."
Elena did not wait three.
She reached into the folder, snatched the consent form, and tore it in half. Then she tore it into four pieces. The sound of paper tearing was the most satisfying sound she had ever heard.
"You want me to sign? Keep dreaming!"