The silence inside the safe room was heavy. It was the kind of artificial quiet that only thick steel plating and soundproof insulation could provide, completely separating them from the nightmare unfolding just beyond the bookshelf.
Lin Qing sat with her knees drawn up to her chest, her back pressed against the cold wall. In the dim, amber glow of the overhead LED, she kept her eyes fixed on the small boy sitting opposite her.
As a forr military surgeon, Lin Qing was an expert at reading people under high-stress conditions. She could diagnose a soldier’s psychological state—whether they were on the verge of breaking or holding onto their sanity by a thread—just by looking at their posture. But looking at Han Ye, she felt completely out of her depth.
For one, she had absolutely zero experience with children. Her life before this had been a blur of sterile operating rooms, muddy field tents, and trauma triage. Kids were fragile, emotional creatures who needed gentle voices and soft boundaries.
But Han Ye didn’t look fragile at all. He sat cross-legged, his tiny back perfectly straight, staring blankly at the reinforced steel door. His posture was so rigid and disciplined it was almost unnatural for a five-year-old. He wasn’t crying for his father. He wasn’t reaching out for his stepmother for comfort. He was just... waiting.
’How am I supposed to interact with the future villain of the world when he’s currently the size of a carry-on suitcase?’ Lin Qing thought, a faint, dry smile tugging at the corner of her lips.
If this were the original novel, the original Lin Qing would currently be hysterical, screaming at the walls, and making their situation ten tis worse. By taking a back seat and letting the kid lead her into the safe room, she had already fundantally altered the tiline. But survival in a locked room was a temporary luxury. They couldn’t stay hidden forever.
Grumble.
The sharp, echoing sound of a miniature stomach protesting broke the suffocating silence.
Lin Qing blinked, her gaze dropping to Han Ye’s midsection. The boy didn’t flinch, but a tiny, almost imperceptible flush of pink colored his chubby cheeks. Despite his icy deanor and whatever bizarre secrets he was hiding, he was still a human being. And more importantly, he was a five-year-old child who hadn’t eaten properly since the world started falling apart.
Almost on cue, Lin Qing’s own stomach twinged with a dull ache. She hadn’t eaten since waking up in this body, and her internal clock told her that at least several hours had passed since they first locked themselves inside.
"Hungry?" Lin Qing asked softly, keeping her voice level and free of any patronizing sweetness. She treated him like an adult, sensing that a baby voice would only alienate him.
Han Ye didn’t answer imdiately. He looked at her, his dark eyes assessing her face for a long mont before he reached down and unzipped his backpack. His small hands reached inside and pulled out a single, slightly squished milk bun wrapped in clear plastic. It was clearly sothing he had grabbed in a rush from the kitchen before running up to her room.
Lin Qing watched him, expecting him to tear into it. Instead, the five-year-old carefully peeled back the plastic wrapping. With a serious, focused expression, his tiny fingers gripped the bread and snapped it in two.
He didn’t split it evenly. He broke it so that one piece was significantly larger—nearly two-thirds of the bun—leaving himself with a ager, small portion.
Extending his small arm, Han Ye held out the larger piece toward Lin Qing.
"Eat," he said, his voice flat, childish, yet carrying an eerie weight.
Lin Qing stared at the bread, then up at his deadpan face. "You should keep the bigger piece, Han Ye. You’re growing. I can manage."
Han Ye didn’t pull his hand back. He held the bread steady, his gaze unwavering. "You have a larger body mass. Your tabolic rate requires more caloric intake to maintain physical functionality in a crisis. If you starve, you beco a liability. Eat."
Lin Qing’s jaw tightened slightly in sheer amazent. ’Liability? tabolic rate? What five-year-old talks like a textbook on combat survival?’
Amusent curled in her chest, replacing a layer of her tension. She took the larger piece of bread from his hand, her fingers brushing against his small, cool skin. "Alright. Thank you."
The boy simply nodded, pulled his hand back, and began to eat his small portion. He chewed slowly, deliberately, maximizing every bite—a habit Lin Qing recognized instantly. It was the eating style of soone who knew what it was like to go days without a single crumb. It was a soldier’s habit.
After he finished, Han Ye reached into his bag again and pulled out a water bottle. He twisted the cap off, took a remarkably small sip, just enough to wet his throat, and then handed the bottle to her.
"Small sips," he instructed. "We don’t know how long we will be stuck."
"I know," Lin Qing replied, taking the bottle. She mimicked his restraint, taking a tiny sip before capping it and handing it back. He carefully stowed it away, zipping the bag shut with a crisp, final sound.
Silence descended upon the room once more.
Hours bled into one another. Without windows or a clock, ti beca a fluid, agonizing concept. Lin Qing estimated that half a day had passed. The initial adrenaline rush of the transmigration had completely faded, leaving behind the stark, uncomfortable realities of basic human biology.
Her bladder was killing her.
There was no bathroom in this hidden vault. It was a reinforced locker ant for short-term ergency concealnt, not an extended stay. Lin Qing shifted her weight, suppressing a groan. She looked across the small space and noticed that Han Ye was also shifting uncomfortably, his small legs crossing and uncrossing, a tiny frown marring his forehead.
"We can’t stay here anymore," Lin Qing said, breaking the silence as she straightened her legs. "I’m going to head out and check the house."
Han Ye’s dark eyes snapped up, instantly alert. "There’s likely danger still roaming the lower levels. The noise from earlier indicated a breach on the first floor."
"I know," Lin Qing said, her voice hardening into the clinical, commanding tone she used when directing a chaotic field hospital. "Which is why you are going to stay right here. If I don’t co back in twenty minutes, you lock this door from the inside and you don’t open it for anyone. Do you understand?"
Han Ye stared at her, his little mind clearly running through dozens of calculations. In his past life, this woman had panicked, dragged him out, and died a ssy death. But the woman sitting in front of him right now didn’t have fear in her eyes. Her posture was relaxed but ready, her gaze piercing and steady. She wasn’t the weak stepmother he rembered.
Slowly, Han Ye nodded. "Understood."
He reached down toward his tactical backpack once more. Lin Qing assud he was going to hand her the water bottle or perhaps a flashlight.
Instead, the five-year-old reached deep into the side compartnt and pulled out a heavy, matte-black object.
Clunk.
Lin Qing’s breath hitched. Resting in the boy’s small, chubby palms was a semi-automatic Type 92 pistol.
The cold steel of the firearm glead under the dim LED light. Lin Qing, completely stunned, stared at the weapon, then looked up at the five-year-old boy who was holding it with perfect muzzle discipline, pointing it safely toward the floor.
"Where did you get that?" Lin Qing demanded, her instincts flaring. A child holding a firearm was a nightmare scenario in any universe.
Han Ye blinked, his face suddenly shifting. For a fraction of a second, he forced his expression into sothing resembling an innocent, clueless child, tilting his head slightly. "It was in Daddy’s locked desk drawer in the study. I know the code. It’s for protection."
Lin Qing didn’t buy the innocent act for a single second. A normal five-year-old wouldn’t even have the physical strength to properly rack the slide of a Type 92, let alone think to steal it from a hidden drawer during a crisis.
She reached out, her movents swift and practiced, and took the gun from his hands. The weight was familiar, comforting. She instantly dropped the magazine with a slick click of her thumb, checking the brass rounds stacked neatly inside. Fully loaded. She slapped the magazine back into the grip and racked the slide, chambering a round with a crisp, lethal clack-clack.
Han Ye watched her movents, his dark eyes widening ever so slightly. His small hands hesitated in the air, a rare flicker of genuine doubt crossing his face.
"Have you..." Han Ye swallowed, his childish voice trembling just a fraction. "Have you ever held one of those before?"
Lin Qing looked down at him. Seeing the future, cold-blooded tyrant of the apocalypse looking genuinely worried that his stepmother might accidentally shoot her own foot off was deeply ironic.
A confident smile broke across her face. She reached out with her free hand, placing it on his head, and roughly ruffled his soft, ssy hair.
"Don’t worry about , kiddo," Lin Qing said, her voice laced with a cool confidence. "I’ve handled bigger toys than this in worse places. Stay put."
Turning toward the electronic release button on the wall, Lin Qing felt a surge of adrenaline. With a loaded firearm in her hand and her military training intact, she wasn’t a piece of cannon fodder anymore. She was a predator.
She hit the button, and the heavy steel door began to slide open, revealing the dark, silent study beyond.
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