Genre Ranking
Get the APP HOT
Home > Modern > Reborn with 10 Billion to Conquer the Apocalypse
Reborn with 10 Billion to Conquer the Apocalypse

Reborn with 10 Billion to Conquer the Apocalypse

Author: : Leo Fairchild
Genre: Modern
She has thirty days. Ten billion dollars. And a quantum space that can swallow anything. Kinsey Elliott died cold, starving, and betrayed-pushed into a frozen abyss by the uncle who stole her fortune. Then she woke up. Back in her penthouse. Back in her perfect body. Back with a silver mark on her wrist that lets her store entire warehouses of supplies in a dimension where time stands still. The world has thirty days until a global ice age freezes everything. Her family has thirty days to try to lock her away, steal her money, and have her killed. And Kinsey? She has thirty days to turn ten billion dollars into an invisible fortress-and burn every last one of them to the ground. She's not surviving the apocalypse. She's building it.

Chapter 1

Kinsey Elliott's eyes snapped open.

Water violently splashed over the edges of the freestanding marble tub as she thrashed upward. She gasped for air, a desperate, tearing sound, her hands clawing at her own throat. Her lungs burned. They felt like they were filled with battery acid, a phantom pain from the toxic rain of the wasteland that still seared her nerve endings.

She scrambled over the slick porcelain edge. Her wet, bare feet hit the polished marble floor, and she slipped. Her kneecap slammed into the hard stone with a sickening crack. A dark purple bruise began to bloom instantly under her pale skin. The pain was sharp, but as she pushed herself up, her body felt... different. Tighter, more densely coiled, humming with a strange, thrumming energy she didn't recognize. The jump had altered her physical baseline.

She didn't care. The sharp, grounding spike of physical pain was a lifeline.

Kinsey crawled toward the massive floor-to-ceiling windows. Her trembling fingers grabbed the heavy velvet curtains and yanked them apart.

Blinding, golden sunlight hit her face. She flinched, throwing a hand over her eyes.

When her vision cleared, she wasn't looking at a frozen, ash-covered wasteland. She was looking at the bustling, vibrant skyline of Manhattan. Yellow cabs looked like tiny insects crawling along the concrete veins below.

Her chest heaved. The erratic hammering of her pulse against her ribs slowly began to steady. She looked down at her left wrist.

The jagged, infected slave brand from the year 2039 was gone. In its place, a faint, glowing silver Mobius strip was embedded in her skin.

She pressed her thumb against the mark.

A deafening hum vibrated in her skull. Instantly, a massive, boundless quantum folding space matrix expanded in her mind. It was cold, sterile, and infinitely empty.

Kinsey pushed herself off the floor. She limped over to the bathroom vanity. Her eyes locked onto the solid gold mouthwash cup sitting next to the sink. She grabbed it. The metal was heavy and cold against her palm.

She focused her mind. Take it.

The gold cup vanished. It didn't blur or fade; it simply ceased to exist in her hand. In her mind's eye, she saw the cup sitting perfectly still on a sterile shelf within the quantum matrix.

A harsh, ragged breath escaped her lips. The future technology was real. She had actually made the timeline jump.

Kinsey looked up. She stared at her reflection in the massive vanity mirror. Her face was flawless. Her cheeks were full, her skin hydrated, her eyes bright. She looked nothing like the starved, hollow-eyed corpse her uncle Clemence had pushed into the freezing abyss fifteen years from now.

A surge of pure, unadulterated hatred boiled in her stomach. It tasted like copper in the back of her throat.

Kinsey balled her right hand into a fist and drove it straight into the mirror.

Glass shattered outward in a violent explosion.

She didn't feel the pain. She only felt the intoxicating rush of impending revenge.

Kinsey turned her back on the ruined mirror. She bypassed the pastel dresses and pulled down a sharp, aggressive black Tom Ford tailored suit.

As she slipped the heavy fabric over her shoulders, her posture changed. The feral, desperate survivor of the wasteland was buried deep. On the surface, she was once again the cold, untouchable heiress of the Elliott family.

She picked up her iPhone from the nightstand. The screen lit up.

Thirty days. Exactly thirty days until the global ice age hit.

Kinsey tapped the screen, dialing the private, encrypted number of her senior account manager at the Swiss Bank.

"Miss Elliott?" The man's voice was groggy. "Do you have any idea what time it is in Geneva?"

"Override Code: Alpha-Seven-Tango-Nine," Kinsey said. Her voice was flat, devoid of any human warmth.

The line went dead silent. The manager's tone shifted instantly to a tone of ice-cold professionalism and absolute deference. "Code verified. How may I assist you, Miss Elliott?"

"Liquidate my entire tech conglomerate trust fund," Kinsey ordered. "All ten billion dollars. Sell it at market price. Right now."

"Miss Elliott, wait!" The manager's voice cracked. "That will trigger hundreds of millions in penalty fees. The SEC will launch an immediate investigation into the sudden dump of shares. The market will panic."

"I don't care about the penalties," Kinsey said, rubbing the silver mark on her wrist with her bloody thumb. "I want every single cent converted to liquid cash in my offshore accounts within twenty-four hours. If you fail, I will ruin you."

She ended the call before he could argue.

The shrill ring of the penthouse's private elevator doorbell pierced the silence.

Kinsey walked to the security monitor. The screen showed the family's chief legal counsel, Mr. Vance, standing outside her door. He was clutching a thick stack of legal documents, adjusting his gold-rimmed glasses nervously.

Kinsey unlocked the heavy oak door and pulled it open.

Vance puffed out his chest, trying to project authority. "Kinsey, your uncle Clemence sent me. Your recent erratic behavior is deeply concerning to the board. You need to sign this supplementary agreement relinquishing your voting rights to the trust, for your own good."

He shoved the papers toward her.

Kinsey didn't blink. She grabbed the thick stack of papers. With one violent, fluid motion, she ripped the contract in half. Then she ripped it again.

"What are you doing?!" Vance gasped, his face turning red.

Kinsey threw the shredded paper directly into his face. The white confetti rained down over his expensive suit.

"Get out of my sight," Kinsey said, her voice dropping to a lethal whisper.

Vance's face twisted in anger. He reached into his pocket and pulled out his phone. "You've lost your mind. I'm calling Clemence right now to initiate emergency protocols-"

"Go ahead," Kinsey interrupted. She leaned in, her eyes locking onto his. "And while you have him on the line, tell him about the townhouse in Long Island. The one on Elm Street. Where your mistress, Chloe, is currently raising your three-year-old illegitimate son."

Vance froze. The color drained from his face, leaving him a sickly, pale gray. His fingers went numb. The phone slipped from his hand and clattered against the marble floor.

"How..." Vance choked out, his chest heaving.

"I know everything, Vance," Kinsey said. "Now pick up your trash and get in the elevator before I destroy your life."

Vance scrambled to pick up his phone. He stumbled backward, looking at Kinsey as if she were a demon. He practically fell into the elevator, mashing the button to close the doors.

Kinsey stepped over the torn pieces of paper on the floor. She grabbed her car keys. It was time to start buying.

Chapter 2

The biting chill of the late autumn wind slapped Kinsey's face as she stepped out of the Manhattan luxury high-rise. It felt refreshing. It cleared the last remnants of sleep from her brain.

She raised a hand. A yellow taxi screeched to a halt at the curb. Kinsey slid into the cracked leather backseat.

"Where to, lady?" the driver asked, chewing loudly on a piece of gum.

"Brooklyn," Kinsey said. "The abandoned industrial park on 4th and Miller."

As the cab merged into the heavy New York traffic, Kinsey pulled out her phone. She bypassed the standard browser and booted up an encrypted dark web application. She needed to move fast.

She contacted a shadow broker specializing in offshore shell companies. She transferred a massive, non-refundable Bitcoin fee for expedited service. Within ten minutes, she had ten different procurement companies registered in the Cayman Islands, all under fake corporate identities.

The taxi jerked to a stop in front of a massive, graffiti-covered warehouse. The area was desolate. Weeds grew through the cracked concrete.

Kinsey dropped a crisp hundred-dollar bill on the center console and stepped out.

She walked up to the rusted rolling metal door. A heavy padlock secured it. Kinsey pulled a pair of heavy-duty bolt cutters from her designer tote bag. She clamped the jaws around the steel shackle and squeezed with all her body weight.

The lock snapped with a sharp crack.

She kicked the small side door open. A thick, suffocating smell of mold, dust, and stagnant air hit her face. She walked inside, her heels clicking against the empty concrete floor. She scanned the ceiling. No cameras. No blind spots. Just thousands of square feet of empty space.

Perfect.

Kinsey pulled an iPad from her bag. She logged into the largest military surplus supplier network on the dark web.

Her fingers flew across the screen. She didn't look at the prices. She added ten thousand crates of MREs (Meals Ready-to-Eat) and high-calorie compressed survival biscuits to her cart.

A red warning box popped up on the screen: Insufficient Stock.

Kinsey's jaw tightened. She typed in a custom order request, offering a thirty percent premium above market price to force the supplier to reroute inventory from every state in the country.

Next, she bypassed the public retail websites entirely. Instead, she leveraged her dark-web logistics broker to trigger synchronized buy-orders across her newly formed shell corporations. She systematically purchased massive volumes of Canada Goose polar expedition parkas and Arc'teryx Gore-Tex tactical shells directly from the brands' largest wholesale distributors, operating under the highly credible guise of outfitting a massive, privately-funded arctic research expedition.

Her phone vibrated in her pocket.

It was a text from the Swiss Bank. Transfer Complete. First tranche of $5,000,000,000 USD has cleared into your offshore accounts.

Kinsey didn't even smile. She immediately wired twenty million dollars in non-refundable deposits to the various suppliers to lock in her orders.

She walked out of the warehouse, securing the door behind her. She walked three blocks down the street to a massive Costco wholesale store.

Kinsey grabbed three oversized flatbed carts. She moved through the aisles like a machine. She didn't browse. She swept entire shelves of tactical seasonings, high-sodium canned meats, and dense, high-calorie chocolate bars directly into her carts.

Other shoppers stared. Two middle-aged women in yoga pants stopped in the aisle, pointing at Kinsey's overflowing carts and whispering to each other with mocking smiles.

Kinsey ignored them. In thirty days, those same women would be stabbing each other over a single, half-melted chocolate bar.

She pushed the heavy carts to the register. The cashier looked overwhelmed. Kinsey pulled out her black American Express Centurion card and slapped it on the counter.

"Ring it up," Kinsey said. "And I need three of your delivery trucks to bring this to my warehouse immediately. I'll pay ten thousand dollars extra for the transport."

Two hours later, the roar of heavy diesel engines echoed through the empty Brooklyn industrial park. Three Costco box trucks backed up to Kinsey's warehouse.

Sweat poured down the faces of the delivery workers as they unloaded the massive pallets of food. They stacked the cardboard boxes in the center of the warehouse, creating a small mountain.

The lead worker, a burly man with a thick beard, wiped his forehead with a dirty rag. He looked Kinsey up and down, taking in her expensive suit and the fact that she was completely alone.

"Hey, sweetheart," he said, taking a step closer, his tone dripping with sleazy confidence. "That's a lot of food for a little girl. You need some company to help you eat it?"

Kinsey's eyes went dead. She didn't step back. She reached into her pocket, pulled out a stack of hundred-dollar bills, and threw them hard against the man's chest.

"Get in your trucks and get out of my warehouse," Kinsey said. Her voice was terrifyingly calm, carrying the weight of someone who had killed before.

The worker flinched. The predatory look in his eyes vanished, replaced by sudden, instinctual fear. He scrambled to pick up the money. "Yeah. Crazy bitch. Let's go, boys."

The trucks sped away. The heavy metal warehouse door slammed shut, leaving Kinsey in total silence.

She walked up to the mountain of boxes. She placed her bare palm flat against the rough cardboard.

She pushed her mind into the quantum matrix.

A massive, invisible vacuum force erupted in the air around her. The air pressure dropped so fast her ears popped.

In the blink of an eye, the hundreds of boxes vanished. Not a single speck of dust remained on the concrete floor.

Kinsey closed her eyes and looked inward. Inside the space, the supplies were perfectly categorized and stacked on sterile, floating shelves. Time inside the space was frozen. The food would never rot.

A deep, visceral sense of satisfaction washed over her, temporarily silencing the gnawing, panic-driven hunger of her PTSD.

Her iPad chimed. A new dark web auction had just gone live. A massive shipment of military-grade, broad-spectrum antibiotics was counting down.

Kinsey typed in a number that was triple the current highest bid. She hit send. The life-saving medicine was hers.

Chapter 3

The heavy glass revolving doors of the elite Manhattan Michelin-starred restaurant pushed open. Kinsey stepped into the warm, dimly lit lobby. The air smelled of expensive truffles and roasted garlic.

The maître d', a tall man with a sharp, judgmental face, immediately stepped into her path. He looked at her tactical boots and the dust on the hem of her Tom Ford suit.

"Excuse me, madam," he said, his voice stiff and condescending. "We are fully booked for the evening. And we do have a strict dress code."

Kinsey didn't waste a single breath explaining herself. She reached into her pocket, pulled out her limitless Amex Black Card, and slammed it down on the polished mahogany host stand. The heavy metal card made a sharp smack.

The manager's eyes darted to the card. The condescension melted off his face instantly. His spine curved into a deep, subservient bow.

"Right this way, Miss. We have our best table available for you."

He led her to a secluded booth positioned right against the floor-to-ceiling glass. Below her, the glittering lights of Wall Street stretched out like a sea of electric fireflies.

A waiter practically ran over, handing her a leather-bound menu.

Kinsey pushed it away. "Bring me your largest bone-in Tomahawk steak. Rare. And open a bottle of your oldest Domaine de la Romanée-Conti."

She didn't care that the wine cost more than a luxury car.

Kinsey looked out the window. She watched the men in tailored suits and women in designer coats hurrying along the sidewalks. Ants, she thought. In exactly one month, they would all be frozen solid, their expensive clothes useless against the minus-eighty-degree winds. A cold smirk pulled at the corner of her mouth.

The waiter arrived with the massive steak. It was charred on the outside, sizzling in hot butter.

Kinsey picked up the heavy steak knife. She sliced into the thick meat. Dark red blood and rich juices pooled onto the white porcelain plate. She put a piece in her mouth. The explosion of fat, salt, and tender protein hit her tongue.

She closed her eyes. The memory of chewing on bitter, frozen tree bark in the wasteland tried to surface, but the rich taste of the beef crushed it.

While she chewed, she pulled out her iPad. She pulled up the blueprints for her off-grid bunker. She used her stylus to circle the critical zones. She needed heavy-duty diesel generators. She needed military-grade reverse osmosis water filtration systems.

"Oh my god, is that Kinsey?"

A shrill, nasal voice cut through her concentration.

Kinsey looked up. One table over, three socialites in tight cocktail dresses were staring at her. Kinsey recognized the one in the middle-Sarah, a trust fund baby who had always hated her.

"I heard she completely lost her mind," Sarah said loudly, intentionally raising her voice so Kinsey could hear. "Selling off all her shares to buy... what was it? Canned beans? She's a total doomsday psycho."

The other two women giggled behind their manicured hands.

Kinsey swallowed her bite of steak. She picked up her crisp, white linen napkin and slowly wiped the blood from the corner of her mouth.

She stood up. She walked over to Sarah's table.

Sarah looked up, a smug smile on her face. "Can we help you, Kinsey?"

Kinsey reached out and picked up the large crystal pitcher of ice water sitting in the center of their table. Without a word, she tilted it and poured the freezing water directly over Sarah's head.

The ice cubes hit Sarah's face. The water ruined her expensive blowout and soaked her silk dress.

Sarah shrieked, jumping up from her chair. "Are you insane?!" she screamed, raising her hand to slap Kinsey.

Kinsey didn't move. She just stared at Sarah. Her eyes were completely dead, void of any empathy or fear. It was the look of a predator deciding whether to snap its prey's neck.

Sarah's hand froze in mid-air. The sheer, suffocating pressure radiating from Kinsey made Sarah's stomach drop. She backed away, trembling.

Kinsey dropped the empty pitcher on the table. It shattered. She walked to the front counter, dropped two thousand dollars in cash for the meal and the tip, and walked out the door.

A black, bulletproof Maybach was waiting at the curb. Kinsey got in.

"The underground exchange," she told the driver.

Twenty minutes later, Kinsey was walking through a series of retinal scanners in a subterranean vault deep beneath Manhattan. The air was frigid and smelled of ozone.

The vault manager, a sweaty, overweight man named Higgins, rubbed his hands together. "Miss Elliott! What kind of portfolio diversification are we looking at today?"

Kinsey tossed her iPad onto his desk. "I want every single solid gold bar you currently have in this facility."

Higgins choked on his own spit. "Miss Elliott, physical gold is incredibly difficult to liquidate. The storage fees alone-"

Kinsey leaned across the desk. Her presence was suffocating. "Do you want the millions in commission fees, Higgins, or should I take my cash to your competitor across the street?"

Higgins swallowed hard. Sweat beaded on his forehead. "Right away, ma'am."

Thirty minutes later, Kinsey stood inside the massive steel vault. Four heavy-duty reinforced carts sat in the center of the room, stacked high with gleaming, heavy gold bars.

"I need to inspect the purity," Kinsey said. "Everyone out. Close the door."

Higgins nodded quickly and ushered the armed guards out. The massive steel door swung shut with a heavy, echoing boom.

Kinsey was alone.

She walked up to the first cart. She placed her hands flat against the cold metal of the gold bars.

She activated the matrix.

The air warped. The carts and the tons of gold vanished instantly, swallowed by the void.

Kinsey let out a slow breath. When the global flood hit and the billionaires retreated to the Ark Olympus, paper money would be toilet paper. This gold was her absolute ticket to the upper echelons of the apocalypse.

She opened the vault door. Higgins looked inside and his jaw dropped. The vault was completely empty.

"I've arranged for my own private armed transport," Kinsey lied smoothly. "The funds are already in your account."

She walked out of the facility and stepped onto the dark Manhattan street.

Her phone vibrated in her pocket. The screen lit up in the darkness.

Caller ID: Uncle Clemence.

Download Book

COPYRIGHT(©) 2022