DAYBLIND
The world ended on a Tuesday, but Silas Creed had opted out of it years before the sky began to burn.
His universe was a seventy-square-foot patch of living room floor, a nest of worn blankets and flattened pillows walled off from the rest of his apartment. From here, he could not see the windows. He did not have to. The light that bled through the triple-layered blackout curtains and the heavy wool blankets he'd nailed over them was a thing of substance, a thick, viscous yellow that painted the edges of the fabric with a venomous glow. It was 6:13 in the evening, the hour of the deepest Scorch, when the sun's fury was at its peak before beginning its slow, grudging retreat toward the horizon. The heat in the apartment was a physical presence, a wet weight that made every breath a conscious effort. The air smelled of baked dust, stale sweat, and the faint, coppery tang of ozone.
But it was the sound, or the lack of it, that defined his existence now. The world had gone silent. No distant hum of traffic on the Old Post Parkway. No planes dragging their sound across the sky toward Veridian International. No children yelling in the courtyard two floors below. The silence was a vacuum, and into that vacuum crept the Hum.
It was a low, subsonic thrumming, a pressure that vibrated in his molars and resonated deep in his skull. In the first week, he'd thought it was the building's overworked generator or a failing water pump. He'd pressed his ear to the walls, the floor, trying to pinpoint the source until the vibration made his vision swim. But the Hum was everywhere and nowhere. It was the background radiation of the new world, and as far as he could tell, he was the only one tuned to its frequency. For a man who had been terrified of the cacophony of the outside world, this new, singular noise was a unique and private hell. It was the sound of the teeth of the world, grinding in its sleep.
He ran a hand over his face, the rasp of his beard a rough, unfamiliar sound. A month ago—four weeks and three days, to be precise—the world had been loud, and his apartment had been a sanctuary. Now, the silence was the threat, and his sanctuary was a cage.
His routine was the only thing that kept the panic at bay. It was a nocturnal ritual, a liturgy of survival. He waited until the last sliver of malevolent yellow faded from the edges of the blankets, until the oppressive heat began to recede into the walls. Only then did he move.
Tonight, his first act was to check his water. He crept into the kitchen, his bare feet padding silently on the linoleum. He had six gallons left in sealed jugs, and a bathtub half-full of brackish, questionable water he'd collected before the pumps failed. He measured out a single cup, drank half, and used the other half to wet a cloth he wiped over his face and neck. The brief, cool relief was a luxury.
Food was next. He stared at the dwindling cans on the counter. Three cans of beans, two of corn, one of peaches—the prize of his collection, saved for a day when things got truly bad. He wondered what that day would look like. Worse than this? It was hard to imagine. He chose the corn, prying the lid open with the dull end of a knife. He ate half, cold, directly from the can, the metallic taste coating his tongue. He saved the rest for "morning," the deep twilight before the sun rose again.
He remembered the last day he'd been outside. Three years ago. A trip to the King Kullen supermarket for nothing more than milk and bread. The fluorescent lights had seemed too bright, the murmur of the other shoppers a deafening roar. In the checkout line, a child had started screaming, a piercing, meaningless wail that had cracked something deep inside him. The walls of the aisle seemed to bend inward, the air thinning until his lungs burned. He'd dropped his basket, milk and bread forgotten, and had run, a blind, gasping sprint back to his car, and then back to the apartment. He hadn't left since.
The irony was a bitter pill. He had built this prison to protect himself from a world that was too loud, too bright, too full of people. And now, the world had become a quiet, dark, and empty place, and the prison was the only thing keeping him alive.
The NAD broadcasts, before they'd devolved into looping, static-choked warnings, had given the monsters a name: Echoes. They looked like people, the calm, professional voice of David Bishop had explained, but they were not. They moved with a stilted grace. Their reflections in glass or water were delayed by a fraction of a second. They could mimic speech, but their emotional responses were hollow, theatrical. Do not engage. Do not open your door. Trust no one.
The Hum in his skull pitched a half-step higher, a sudden, sharp vibration that made him hiss through his teeth. It was a warning. His own private alarm system.
Thump. Thump. Thump.
The sound was soft, but it hit him like a physical blow. It came from the hallway. From his front door. It wasn't the wind or the settling of the building. It was the sound of a fist. Someone was knocking.
Silas froze, his heart slamming against his ribs, a wild, panicked bird in a cage of bone. His every instinct, honed by years of self-imposed isolation, screamed at him to stay silent, to retreat back to his nest and wait for it to go away. The world outside that door was death. He knew it.
But the knocking came again, more urgent this time. Thump-thump. Thump-thump. It was followed by a voice, small and strained.
"Please... is anyone in there? Please, we need help."
It was a woman. Her voice was thin, laced with a desperation that felt terrifyingly real. He heard another, smaller sound. A child, sniffling.
The Hum in his head was a roaring siren, a physical pain that clouded his thoughts. An Echo could mimic a voice. An Echo could mimic a child's cry. David Bishop's disembodied voice echoed in his memory: Do not open your door.
He took a step back, then another, his body preparing to flee to the relative safety of his nest. But his feet stopped. He thought of the single can of peaches on his counter. He thought of the half-empty tub of water. He thought of the gnawing, crushing loneliness of the silence.
For three years, he had chosen this isolation. But the people outside his door—if they were people—had not.
Slowly, fighting against every screaming nerve in his body, Silas turned and began the long, terrifying journey across his living room. The fifteen feet to his front door felt like a mile-long bridge over a bottomless chasm. He moved without making a sound, his breath held tight in his chest.
He reached the door, pressing his eye to the peephole. The fisheye lens distorted the dim, emergency-lit hallway. He saw a woman, her back pressed against the opposite wall. It was Zainab Al-Jamil from 2B. Her hijab was slightly askew, and her face was pale with exhaustion. Hiding behind her, clutching at her abaya, was her son, Yusuf. His small face was streaked with tears. They were not looking at his door, but down the hall, their eyes wide with a terror that was anything but hollow.
Thump-thump-thump.
The sound came again, but it wasn't from his door this time. It was from further down the hall. Louder. Heavier.
Zainab's head snapped toward his door, her eyes pleading directly into the peephole, as if she could see him, as if she could feel his presence.
"Please," she whispered, her voice a fragile prayer in the dead air. "He's coming."
Silas stared, his hand hovering over the deadbolt. The Hum was a physical scream in his mind, but for the first time, he heard another sound cutting through it: the frantic, terrified thumping of his own heart. The world was at his door. And he had to decide whether to let it in.
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