She died in the apocalypse-betrayed, abandoned, and torn apart by the infected. Then she woke up. Two months before the end of the world. Twenty-two years old again. And on her wrist, a wooden bracelet that her mother had left behind. The bracelet came with a system. A system that eats gold. With enough gold, she can unlock infinite storage for food, water, weapons-anything she needs to survive. The super-hurricane, the floods, the insect plagues, the volcanic winter, the scorching heat... she knows exactly what's coming. While the world sleeps, Joanna shops. She drains her aunt's bank account, maxes out every loan she can find, and buys out half the city. The apocalypse is coming. She'll be ready. But when the chaos begins, the wolves come crawling back-relatives who sold her, friends who betrayed her, a father who abandoned her. They want her food. Her water. Her mercy. Joanna has a different plan. "Why don't you decide who dies first?"
"Sign it, Joanna."
The voice, sharp and grating, cut through the fog in her head.
A heavy stack of papers slammed onto the glass coffee table. The sound vibrated through her skull, a painful echo of the cracking bone and tearing flesh she had just felt.
Joanna's eyes flew open.
The light was blinding. Not the dim, blood-soaked emergency lights of the bunker, but the bright, unforgiving afternoon sun streaming through a large bay window. Her heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic, trapped bird. It was the feeling of being torn apart by the infected, the memory still fresh, her nerve endings screaming in phantom agony. For a fleeting second, she felt the phantom slice of a blade across her tongue, the searing heat of flames licking at her skin before she had thrown herself into the fire to escape a worse fate.
She instinctively threw up a hand, not to shield her eyes, but to ward off the snapping jaws of a zombie.
Her fingers met soft, velvet upholstery.
The jarring contrast-the expectation of rotting teeth, the reality of plush fabric-sent a tremor through her entire body. She froze.
"Are you deaf?" Etha Payne, her aunt, snapped. Her voice was lacquered with a false sweetness that didn't quite cover its greedy core. "Walter is a busy man. We don't have all day."
Joanna slowly lowered her arm.
She was in her aunt's living room in Brooklyn. The air smelled of lemon polish and Etha's cloying perfume, not the metallic tang of blood and decay.
On the table was a marriage agreement, its title embossed in gaudy gold leaf.
Her eyes focused on the name typed neatly below the signature line: Walter Beaumont.
A cold fist clenched around her stomach. Walter Beaumont. The man who was twice her age, the man whose sick pleasures she had been sold to in her past life. The man whose betrayal had led to her being thrown to a horde of the infected.
Her gaze darted to the wall, to the sleek digital calendar hanging beside a tasteless painting.
October 15th.
Two months.
Two months before the first super-hurricane hit the Gulf Coast, before the power grids failed, before the world she knew drowned in chaos and blood. She knew what came after the floods: the insect plagues that would rise from the stagnant waters, the volcanic winter that would bury the land in ash and ice, and the scorching heat that would finish what the cold had started.
The realization hit her not like a wave, but like a physical blow, knocking the air from her lungs. She was back. She was alive.
She was twenty-two again.
Etha misinterpreted her silence as the usual meek compliance. A smug smile touched her lips. "Walter has a penthouse overlooking Central Park, Joanna. A penthouse. Do you even know what that means? You'll be living a life you could only dream of."
She leaned forward, her voice dropping into a conspiratorial, lecturing tone. "After all we've done for you, raising you since your parents passed... this is the least you can do. It's your duty to repay our kindness."
Joanna stared at the woman's perfectly made-up face. She remembered her mother's trust fund, the one meant for her college education, for her future. The one this family had drained dry on designer bags, European vacations, a new Lexus for her cousin, and her cousin Destinee's overseas education. The kindness had a price tag, and they had already cashed the check.
When Joanna still didn't move, Etha's patience snapped. The mask of concern fell away, revealing the ugly, grasping woman beneath.
"Don't you dare get any ideas," she hissed, her voice low and venomous. "If you don't sign this, you're out. On the street. We'll see how long you last with nothing."
From the armchair opposite, her cousin Cody let out a snort of derision. He was scrolling through his phone, bored. He picked up his mug of coffee from the table, swirling the hot liquid.
"Just sign it," he sneered, not even looking at her. "Who else is going to want a freeloader like you? Only some creep like Walter would pay for that face." He waved the mug in front of her, the steam ghosting against her skin, a petty, childish threat.
Joanna took a slow, deep breath.
The urge to lunge across the table, to feel the snap of his neck in her hands, was a roaring fire in her blood. Ten years in the apocalypse had honed her survival instincts into a razor's edge. He was soft. Weak. An easy kill.
She forced the instinct down. Not yet. Not like this.
A cold, unfamiliar calm settled over her. In her past life, she had cried. She had begged. She had pleaded with them, appealing to a sense of family that never existed.
This time would be different.
A small, chilling smile touched her lips. It felt alien on her face.
"You're right," she said, her voice surprisingly steady. "It's a wonderful opportunity."
Etha's face instantly transformed, blooming with triumphant joy. "Finally, you see reason! Here." She snatched a pen from a porcelain holder and thrust it at Joanna. "Sign it. Right now. Before you change your mind."
Joanna didn't take the pen.
Instead, she leaned back into the velvet cushions, crossing her legs. The movement was fluid, confident. It was a posture Etha had never seen on her.
"I will," Joanna said calmly. "But I have conditions."
Etha's smile froze.
"I want what's mine. The family property-my mother's old house in Queens-signed over to me. And half the dowry. Walter's payment won't be a lump sum in your pocket. Half of it comes to me, as an advance on what my mother would have wanted for my marriage."
The silence in the room was absolute. Then, Etha let out a screech of outrage. "Absolutely not! That house is ours! It's the bare minimum you owe us for all the years we fed and clothed you! And the dowry is for the family that raised you-not for some ungrateful child to steal!"
"The trust fund paid for ten times what you spent on me," Joanna stated, her voice flat and devoid of emotion. She met her aunt's furious gaze without flinching. "You know it. I know it. And a good forensic accountant could prove it in a day."
Etha's face went pale, then purple with rage. She shot to her feet, her finger jabbing the air just inches from Joanna's nose. "You ungrateful little bitch! How dare you-"
Cody, seeing his mother's fury, decided to act. He surged forward, swinging the heavy ceramic mug. Hot coffee sloshed over the rim, aimed directly at Joanna's face.
Time seemed to slow down.
The ten years of fighting for her life, of dodging claws and teeth, took over. Joanna's body moved before her mind could even process the threat.
She snapped her head to the side.
The scalding liquid missed her entirely, splashing across the velvet sofa with a hiss, leaving a dark, steaming stain.
Before Cody could even register his miss, before he could pull his arm back, she moved.
She uncoiled from the sofa like a viper. In one swift, brutal motion, she lunged across the low table, grabbing his outstretched wrist with both hands.
She twisted. Hard.
A sickening crack echoed through the silent room.
Cody's scream was high and piercing, like a slaughtered animal. The mug shattered on the floor. He collapsed to his knees, clutching his mangled wrist, his face a mask of agony and disbelief.
Etha stared, her mouth agape, her eyes wide with horror. The niece she knew-the quiet, timid, tearful girl-was gone. In her place was a predator.
Joanna didn't stop. She reached for the coffee table, her fingers closing around the cold, heavy brass of a letter opener. It was ornate, sharp, and perfectly weighted.
In the next second, the cold point of the blade was pressed against Cody's neck, right over the frantic pulse of his carotid artery.
The blade pricked his skin. A single, perfect drop of blood welled up and trickled down his throat.
Cody's screams choked into a terrified whimper. He trembled violently, too scared to even breathe.
Joanna lifted her eyes, her gaze locking onto her aunt's. Her voice was quiet, almost a whisper, but it carried the weight of a death sentence.
"One million dollars. Wired to my account. And the deed to the house."
Etha fumbled for her phone, her hands shaking so badly she could barely hold it. "I'm... I'm calling the police!"
Joanna applied the slightest pressure.
The blade sank a fraction of an inch deeper. More blood, dark and rich, spilled onto Cody's collar.
"Mom!" Cody's voice was a desperate, gurgling sob. "Mom, please! Do what she says! Please!"
That broke her.
Etha's face crumpled. The phone slipped from her nerveless fingers and clattered to the floor. She sank onto the expensive Persian rug, her body shaking with uncontrollable sobs.
"Okay," she whispered, her voice cracking. "Okay. Anything. Just... just don't hurt my son."
Apocalypse Rebirth: My Gold-Eating System
Quye Xiaofang
Fantasy
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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Chapter 11
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Chapter 12
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Chapter 13
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Chapter 14
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Chapter 15
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Chapter 16
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Chapter 17
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Chapter 18
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Chapter 19
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Chapter 20
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