Hayley returned to the hotel she was staying at.
Her room was already packed with stuff. She had told the front desk that there would be deliveries, and she asked them to open the door so they could put the stuff inside. Now the tables, the floor, and even the bed were covered.
A lot of the fried chicken was still steaming hot.
Hayley waved her hand and neatly stowed everything into her inventory.
Tonight, she would stay here and leave the next day. No point wasting what she had already paid for.
Before going to bed, she did three hours of intense physical training, pushing herself to exhaustion and breaking her body's limits. Only after that did she shower and check the surveillance feeds from both her shelter and her warehouse.
Everything looked fine. She even spoke to Summer through her video bot, telling it to watch the supplies. Tomorrow morning, she'd be back.
Summer responded politely, then obediently stayed in the warehouse dog bed, keeping an eye on things.
Hayley slept until six the next day. She was woken by the blaring sirens of police cars and ambulances.
Her hotel, in downtown, had excellent soundproofing, but she was sensitive—any noise could wake her.
The first moment she heard the sirens, she rushed to the windowsill. Pulling back the curtains, she saw the street below swarming with police cars and ambulances.
The hotel was near crowded bars and entertainment venues, and that was where all the emergency vehicles were rushing in and out.
She saw an ambulance parked in front of the bar she had noticed yesterday, and several bloody people were carried out.
An ominous thought formed in her mind. At that moment, footsteps and urgent knocking came outside her room.
Hayley grabbed a shovel and went to the door. Looking through the peephole, she saw hotel staff. She tensed but saw they were fine—they had normal expressions, with no injuries or blood.
"What's going on?" she asked.
"Miss, the front desk got several calls from guests feeling faint. Are you feeling okay?"
"I'm fine," Hayley replied through the door.
"Please stay in your room for a while. The hotel will extend your stay, free of charge. Sorry for the inconvenience!"
The staff moved on to the next room, but Hayley felt a jolt.
The apocalypse…might have started early.
She had to leave.
Hayley grabbed her car keys and left the hotel, making sure to take all the complimentary water, drinks, and toiletries with her.
She noticed the staff member heading toward a corner room, repeatedly knocking until she finally used a keycard to open the door.
Soon, a panicked voice called out.
"Sir! Sir, are you okay? Someone's fainted in Room 809! Hurry!"
The staff used their headsets to alert others. Hayley strode to an elevator, entering one going down as another opened next to it.
A group of staff came out and ran toward the innermost rooms.
As the elevator doors closed in front of her, a piercing scream cut through the air.
"Ahhh!"
That familiar sound.
The zombie virus had broken out early!
Hayley hit the button for the fifth floor without hesitation. She wasn't heading to the lobby.


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