NOVEL Surviving the apocalypse with a wife and a system! [GL] Chapter 156: Extra 1. City of Helior 1.

Surviving the apocalypse with a wife and a system! [GL]

Chapter 156: Extra 1. City of Helior 1.
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Chapter 156: Extra 1. City of Helior 1.

In the city of Helior, the sky was not made of clouds anymore. It was made of light.

People still called it the sky because old habits were hard to kill, but the truth was simpler and stranger. Above the city floated three layers of weather domes, each one tuned by the Central Climate Spine to keep the air clean, the rain steady, and the seasons gentle. Solar rivers ran along the outer rings of the towers. Transit rails stitched the districts together. Every home had a wall screen, a nutrient kitchen, and a cradle link that could support a child from the first engineered cell to the day they learned to run across a floor.

Helior liked to call itself advanced. It liked neat words, polished streets, and bright promises. It had cured more diseases than it could count. It could grow organs in a week, rebuild bone by touch, and make sure two women could have a child that carried both of their bloodlines without compromise. That last miracle had become so ordinary that people barely turned their heads anymore when a couple walked out of a Rebirth Clinic with a tiny sleeping infant wrapped in a white thermal shawl.

Bai Li used to think that made the city feel cold.

Then she met Yan Cijin, and the whole world started to feel warm in a way that was hard to explain.

Bai Li was the kind of woman people noticed before they knew why. She was tall, broad shouldered, and carried herself like she belonged in every room she entered. Her face was sharp in a handsome way, with a straight nose, calm eyes, and a mouth that always looked like it knew a secret. She worked in the civic skyworks division, maintaining the city’s upper rail lines and dome anchors, which meant she spent a lot of time in wind, metal, and open height. She was steady under pressure, quick with her hands, and never acted like anything could truly shake her. Even when she laughed, it sounded like she was trying not to let the whole room hear how soft she really could be.

Yan Cijin was the opposite in the ways that mattered most. She was beautiful in a way that made people forget what they were saying. Not loud, not showy, just impossible to ignore. Her features were delicate, her skin pale like moonlit silk, her eyes bright and clear, and her voice always seemed to move slower than everyone else’s, like she had all the time in the world and knew exactly what to do with it. She ran a private restoration studio in the old cultural quarter, where she repaired antique textiles, painted screens, and family heirlooms for wealthy clients and museums. She had a gentle manner that made strangers talk to her too long, and a stubbornness that showed up only when she thought someone she loved was being careless with their own heart. freewёbnoνel.com

They met at the Lantern Market on a rainless evening in late spring.

Bai Li had been sent to inspect a cracked dome seam near the market district, and Yan Cijin had been there to buy silk thread and mineral dye for a commission. The market was a long open avenue lined with food stalls, plant lamps, and hanging ribbons that moved in the filtered air. Bai Li came down from the maintenance bridge in her work coat, carrying a tool case, when a child ran past her and bumped Yan Cijin hard enough to send a paper box sliding under a stall.

Yan Cijin bent to grab it at the same moment Bai Li did. Their hands brushed. Both of them looked up.

Bai Li’s first thought was that the woman in front of her looked like someone had stolen the moon and taught it how to breathe.

Yan Cijin’s first thought was that the tall engineer kneeling near her had the kind of face that made danger look a little bit safer.

They both reached for the box again. Their fingers touched this time, not by accident but because neither of them pulled away fast enough.

"Sorry," Bai Li said.

"It was not your fault," Yan Cijin said at the exact same time.

That made them both smile.

It should have ended there. A brief market moment. A tiny, forgettable thing. But Yan Cijin’s box had burst open, and the thread spools rolled across the wet stone. Bai Li caught three before they could vanish under a cart wheel. Yan Cijin watched her do it with a startled little laugh, and Bai Li, who had repaired collapsing rail supports in a storm without blinking, actually felt her ears go hot.

"Let me help," Bai Li said.

Yan Cijin gave her a look that was polite on the surface and amused underneath. "You are already helping."

Bai Li glanced at the scattered thread, then back at her. "I mean after this."

The answer should have been no. Yan Cijin had work. Bai Li had a report to file. The city went on. People continued to be busy.

Instead Yan Cijin tucked a loose strand of hair behind her ear and said, "Then you should walk me to the tea house across the market. My hands are full, and you seem very committed." ƒгeewebnovёl.com

Bai Li took that as an invitation to keep talking to her for as long as possible.

They sat by the tea house window while rain machines somewhere far above decided to mist the outer district. Yan Cijin ordered jasmine milk tea. Bai Li ordered plain black tea because she always did, though Yan Cijin made fun of her for it by saying only lonely people drank tea that looked like a warning. Bai Li, with absolute seriousness, told her that plain tea was efficient. Yan Cijin laughed so hard she nearly spilled her drink, and Bai Li found herself watching the curve of her smile more than the street outside.

That was the beginning.

Not dramatic. Not loud. Just one warm evening turning into another, and then another, until their meetings stopped feeling accidental and started feeling necessary.

The city of Helior was built for routine, but love never followed a clean schedule.

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TO BE CONTINUED.

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