LOGINTrust should not require footnotes.
Maya writes that at the top of a clean page because it sounds like something a reasonable person would believe. Then she looks at the page, looks at the ceiling, and adds: Especially when the person requiring footnotes lives inside my skull.
LUS says nothing.
Which is exactly the problem.
The apartment is dark except for the lamp over the kitchen table. Outside, the city hums with late-stage normality. Cars still pass. Someone la
Marcus appears beside container fourteen carrying a mattress by himself. His shirt is damp again, because the universe has grown petty and specific. He drops the mattress inside, straightens, and catches Maya looking.Not staring. Looking. There is a legal distinction.His mouth curves.Not smug. Worse. Knowing.Maya raises an eyebrow like she has absolutely no interest in being perceived. Marcus leans one shoulder against the container frame.“Commander.”“Webb.”“Nice street.”“I built it to keep out trouble.”“And yet here I am.”“That was implied.”His smile deepens.For half a second, the noise of the lane dims around them as if the world has politely turned the volume down so Maya can make several poor internal choices in peace.The pull is there.Named now. Unwelcome, but named.Marcus is not
The first rooms go to families.Not because anyone votes on it. Because Maya says, “Families first,” in the tone that suggests democracy can wait outside with wet shoes.No one argues.The three children from Marcus’s group are placed together with the two adults they keep orbiting, one woman named Sally with a scar across her chin and one broad man called Ivan who has been pretending not to panic every time the smallest child wanders more than six feet away.Nora and Ben get the next one. They may not be mother and son, but they arrived like a package deal and that’s how they exist now.Ben stands in the doorway of the container room, twelve years old and trying very hard not to look twelve, clutching Gerald to his chest. Gerald’s condition may have improved. Slightly.“It has a lock,” he says.Nora’s hand tightens on his shoulder.“It does,” Maya says.Ben nod
The mattresses arrive like a religious offering. People actually cheer — quietly, because the dead are rude about joy, but enough that Maya has to pretend she isn't moved by grown adults getting emotional over foam density."Easy, everyone," she calls. "They're mattresses, not democracy.""That's because you already sleep on a bed," Aaron says."I sleep on paperwork and spite."Eli jumps down beside her, two flat-pack frames under one arm. Dust streaks his cheek; a bruise is blooming along his jaw. He looks tired. Alive. Amused.Maya reaches up without thinking and wipes the dust from his cheek with her thumb.It is small. Nothing. It is also, apparently, visible from space.Eli stills for half a second. Maya realizes what she has done. He does not make it a thing, which is kind, and therefore worse."Inventory first," he says quietly."Yes." She removes her hand like it has committed a minor offence.The ne
The new gate opens beautifully.That is suspicious.Maya stands beneath the crosswalk as Eli and Pete haul the inner bar free, and the reinforced panels swing inward with a heavy, obedient groan.For one glorious second, it looks like civilization.Then Aaron says, “Feels very castle-y,” and ruins it by being correct.Maya points at him. “Do not say castle-y in front of the gate. It’ll get ideas.”The plan is simple. Which means it is lying. They need beds. Mattresses. shelves. Anything that turns twenty steel boxes from maritime storage into rooms where people can sleep without waking up with corrugation imprinted into their souls.The nearest flat-pack furniture outlet sits three miles east, a blue-and-yellow monument to affordable domestic optimism and relationship-ending wardrobes.Maya takes Eli, Pete, and Priya in her truck. In another she’s assigned Carol, Caleb, Ron and Tessa.
By noon on build day two, the road has stopped looking like a road.This is deeply satisfying.Maya tries not to enjoy it too much, because enjoying things is how the universe finds your address.The containers sit tight now, steel ribs locked shoulder to shoulder down both sides of the approach, doors facing inward like a row of blunt, ugly promises. Carol calls them “modular habitation units,” which is what happens when someone gets too close to engineering and starts flirting with syllables.Maya calls them rooms. Twenty of them.Lockable. Dry. Defensible.Privacy, storage, isolation, overflow quarters, and blessed acoustic distance from Marcus’s people, who have apparently mistaken the end of the world for a breeding program with mood lighting.“Container twelve is two inches proud,” Eli says.Maya checks the chalk line.He is right.Of course he is.“Two inches proud
By eight in the morning, Maya has discovered that building a wall out of shipping containers is exactly like assembling flat-pack furniture, if the furniture weighs two tons, requires a crane, and can kill three people because someone sneezed near a guide rope.So, essentially, Swedish design with consequences.“Two feet left,” Eli calls.Molly, in the crane cab, lifts one hand without looking away from the swinging container. Her face is pure focus, all grease streaks and joyless concentration, which on Molly means she is having the time of her life.The container drifts.Slow.Huge.Awful.Beautiful.Maya stands at the chalk line with the site map tucked under one arm, radio in hand, trying to look like a commander and not a woman who has willingly introduced industrial logistics into her grief process.“Hold,” Eli says.The container stops. Almost.It sways half an inch. Ev
The bus depot group comes back at 03:18.Maya almost respects the commitment to tradition. Almost.Last time, they tested the front, sent one man to the east service door, and posted a shooter back far enough to feel clever. It had been sloppy, effective if people panicked, and exac
Marcus is waiting at the bottom of the north walkway.Maya sees him before he speaks, because Marcus Webb is not a subtle man. He’s large, scarred, trailing the sense that violence has agreed to behave for now and could be talked out of it with very little notice.
People like to think survival is about bravery.Big choices. Hero moments. Running toward danger with a jaw set like a movie poster.In Maya's experience, survival is mostly about not doing stupid things in quick succession, which sounds easier than it is when the world has decided to become aggres
The world should end on a Monday.There’s something honest about that. Brutal, yes, but clean. A Monday already has the emotional texture of damp socks and unpaid bills, so adding zombies feels less like a cosmic betrayal and more like management escalating a complaint.Unfortunately, the world cho







