Maren climbed out of the drainage shaft just before dusk.
The sky above Los Angeles was the color of bruised copper, the air heavy with ash that hadn’t fallen in years yet never seemed to clear. The skyline was jagged now—half-collapsed towers leaning into one another like exhausted giants.
For a long moment, she simply stood there.
Above ground felt wrong.
Too open. Too exposed. Too quiet.
That was what unsettled her most.
No distant shouting.
No drones scanning the horizon.
No boots on broken pavement.
Just wind moving through hollow buildings, producing low, mournful tones that mimicked voices if you listened too long.
“Where is everyone?” she whispered.
Her voice vanished into the empty boulevard.
She moved carefully, keeping to the shadow of a crumbling parking structure. The lantern remained unlit—too conspicuous. Instead, she let her eyes adjust to the dimming light, stepping around shattered glass and the skeletal remains of abandoned vehicles.
The city looked staged.
Cars sat frozen mid-intersection. Doors open. Personal belongings still inside. As if life had been interrupted rather than ended.
She crouched beside one vehicle, brushing ash from the dashboard. The radio display flickered faintly—no power source visible—then died.
A reset ripple.
She felt it again.
Subtle now, like an aftershock.
The air shimmered at the edge of her vision. A building across the street wavered—brick momentarily revealing steel framing, then something stranger beneath it: a faint geometric lattice.
She forced herself not to stare.
Awareness felt dangerous above ground.
Down in the tunnels, the system tolerated ambiguity. Surface spaces felt more curated, more tightly monitored. Like a showroom rather than a shelter.
Maren slipped into a narrow alley, heart steady but alert. She kept her movements irregular—pause, step, pause again. If something tracked patterns, she would not provide one.
Halfway down the alley she stopped.
Footprints.
Not old.
Fresh disturbances in the ash.
Boot prints. Two different sizes. Heading north.
She knelt, pressing her fingers lightly against one indentation. The ash was still loose around the edges.
Minutes old.
She scanned the rooftops instinctively.
Nothing.
No movement. No glint of lenses.
Which worried her more.
If the hunters had gone underground, then the surface might have been abandoned deliberately.
Cleared.
A decoy layer.
The thought tightened her chest.
She slipped through the rear entrance of a collapsed bookstore, weaving through toppled shelves and pages fused together by heat long ago. On one wall, a mural remained half-intact—bright colors preserved beneath soot. Children running through a sunlit field.
The optimism of another era.
Maren paused there, studying it.
The mural didn’t flicker.
That meant something.
She closed her eyes briefly and focused—not on the ruins, not on the silence—but on the hum beneath everything.
Faint. Distant. Steady.
Silen was still active somewhere.
The system hadn’t collapsed.
That meant she still had time.
A metallic clang echoed from somewhere beyond the bookstore.
She froze.
Not wind.
Too sharp.
Deliberate.
Maren extinguished her presence as best she could—slipping deeper into shadow, slowing her breathing, letting the city’s emptiness swallow her outline.
The clang came again.
Closer.
She edged toward a broken window and peered through a gap in the brickwork.
Across the street, between two collapsed buildings, a figure moved—slow, cautious, carrying something that glinted briefly in the fading light.
Not a soldier.
Not a drone.
Someone else searching.
The figure paused, turning slightly—as if sensing her in return.
For a heartbeat, the ruins seemed to hold their breath.
Maren didn’t move.
Above them, the sky shimmered faintly—just enough to suggest that whatever ran this world was still watching.
And somewhere beneath the silence, something shifted in response to their proximity.