Apocalypse Ground Zero: Refusing To Leave Home-Chapter 54: No Place To Go

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Chapter 54: No Place To Go

The words hung in the air after Rouxi turned and walked away.

"I told you so."

The four syllables landed with the weight of absolute certainty, and then she was gone, heading up the stairs without looking back.

Zhou Chenghai sat on the couch with his hand still pressed against his ribs, feeling the sharp ache that came with every breath. The swelling around his left eye had progressed to the point where his vision on that side was starting to narrow as the bruise spreading dark and hot beneath the skin.

His mouth was dry. Painfully dry, and he could taste the copper of his blood from where he had either lost a tooth or had bitten his cheek when he was hit. But the dryness, the blood brought about the kind of thirst that made swallowing difficult and made him acutely aware of how long it had been since he’d had water.

He needed to get to the kitchen for some water.

Simple goal. Simple action. Stand up, walk across the room, get a glass of water.

He shifted his weight forward carefully, testing how much the movement would cost him. The ribs protested immediately—a sharp, bright pain that made his breathing hitch and forced him to pause halfway through the motion. He waited for it to settle, then pushed through and stood.

The room tilted slightly. He steadied himself, one hand still braced against his side, and took a slow breath that didn’t go as deep as he wanted it to.

The kitchen was maybe fifteen feet away. Straight shot across the living room.

He took his first step.

But a survivor moved into his path.

Not quickly. Not aggressively. Just a casual shift in position that put the man directly in front of him, blocking the most direct route to the kitchen. The survivor was looking at something else, his attention seemingly elsewhere, but his body occupied the space Chenghai needed to move through.

Chenghai stopped and adjusted his trajectory slightly to the left, aiming for the gap between the couch and the wall.

But suddenly, another survivor stepped into that space.

This one was carrying something—a bag, maybe, or a bundle of clothes. He moved with the easy confidence of someone who belonged there, who had every right to be exactly where he was, and his presence filled the gap completely.

Chenghai’s ribs throbbed with the effort of standing still. He shifted his weight, trying to ease the pressure, and looked for another route.

The kitchen was still visible. Still accessible. There were people moving through it—survivors opening cabinets, reaching for supplies, eating food they’d taken from the pantry without asking. But there was space between them. Gaps he could move through if he could just get there.

He angled toward the far side of the room, moving slower now, each step measured and careful. His breathing had gone shallow and tight, the kind of restricted rhythm that came when your body was trying to protect itself from further damage.

Someone crossed in front of him.

Not blocking him, exactly. Just moving through the same space at the same time, their path intersecting with his in a way that forced him to stop or collide. He stopped. Waited for them to pass.

They didn’t hurry.

He started moving again, aiming for the kitchen entrance from a different angle.

A survivor was already there.

Standing in the doorway, not doing anything in particular. Just existing in that exact spot, leaning against the frame with his arms crossed, watching the activity inside the kitchen with mild interest.

Chenghai tried to move past him on the right.

Someone else stepped into that space, reaching for something on the counter, their arm extending across the gap and their body filling the opening.

He adjusted left.

Another survivor brushed past him without acknowledgment, their shoulder making contact with his in a way that sent a fresh spike of pain through his ribs. No apology. No recognition that they’d touched him at all. They just kept moving, heading toward the living room with a bottle of water in their hand.

Chenghai’s breathing hitched. He pressed his hand harder against his side, trying to stabilize the damaged ribs, and looked for another path.

The kitchen was right there. Ten feet away. Maybe less.

But every direction he turned, someone was in the way.

Not confronting him. Not stopping him with words or threats. Just occupying space. Moving through the house like they owned it, like his presence didn’t matter, like he was just another obstacle to navigate around rather than a person with his own trajectory and needs.

He could feel Zhenlan still on the couch behind him, could sense Lingyun somewhere to his left, watching. Yuche was near the edge of the room, positioned where he could see everything, his expression unreadable.

None of them moved to help.

None of them intervened.

Chenghai took another step toward the kitchen, his ribs screaming with the effort, his breathing so shallow now that he wasn’t getting enough air and the edges of his vision were starting to blur slightly.

A survivor reached past him to grab something from the counter—a piece of fruit, maybe, or a snack. Their arm extended across his path, their body leaning into his space without hesitation or acknowledgment.

He tried to move around them... there had to be some place that he could go...

But every time he so much as turned his head... someone else was there.

Standing exactly where he needed to go, their back to him, their attention on something else entirely.

Chenghai shifted direction again, aiming for a gap that looked clear, that seemed open enough to move through.

The gap closed.

Another survivor stepped into it, casual and unhurried, filling the space with their presence.

His ribs were on fire now. Each breath was a conscious effort, each movement a negotiation with pain that was getting harder to manage. He could feel sweat starting to form on his forehead despite the coolness of the room, could feel his body beginning to shake slightly from the sustained effort of standing and moving and trying to navigate through a space that kept shifting and closing around him.

He made one more attempt.

Straight forward. Direct path. No adjustments.

A survivor stepped into his path and stopped.

Not moving aside. Not acknowledging him. Just standing there, solid and immovable, their body a wall that Chenghai would have to physically push through to get past. 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝚠𝚎𝚋𝗻𝗼𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝚘𝐦

Finally, Chenghai stopped.

Not because he chose to.

But because there was nowhere left to go.

Every direction was blocked. Every path was occupied. Every gap had closed or filled or shifted into something impassable.

Around him, the survivors kept moving. Someone opened a cabinet in the kitchen. Someone else walked past carrying a plate of food. Another survivor laughed at something, the sound casual and relaxed, like this was just another evening in a house that belonged to them.

The kitchen remained active. People kept eating. Kept taking. Kept existing in the space that used to be accessible and was now something else entirely.

Chenghai stood frozen in the middle of the living room, his hand pressed against his damaged ribs, his breathing tight and shallow, unable to move forward or backward or anywhere at all.

The survivors continued their motion around him.