Home / Fantasy / NO TIME LEFT / THE FIRST RULE
THE FIRST RULE
last update2025-05-10 02:11:35

They woke up to a strange stillness—too quiet for a world that looked alive. The sun was just beginning to rise, casting a faint orange glow over the endless grassy plain. Dew clung to the cabin’s broken windowpanes, and for a moment, it felt like they had all dreamed the day before.

But then Elias saw the body. Kul had helped move it during the night, wrapping it in a dusty tarp from one of the sheds. It now lay silently under the trees just beyond the cabin. A reminder. The countdowns were real.

Inside, the others were stirring. Kaia sat alone in the far corner, her knees drawn to her chest, staring blankly at the floor. Her timer still showed 2 Days, 8 Hours. Elias didn’t disturb her. She hadn’t said a word since last night.

“Everyone up,” a man called out. Elias turned to see Leon, the older man with graying hair, standing with his arms crossed. “We need to meet. Now. Out front.”

Within minutes, everyone gathered outside, forming a loose circle under the early morning light. Some were still half-asleep. Others looked like they hadn’t rested at all.

“We need to get organized,” Leon said. “No more standing around panicking. We don’t know how long we’re stuck here, but we need to start making decisions.”

Someone nodded in agreement. Another muttered, “About time.”

Leon continued. “We have a few problems on our hands. First—food. We don’t know how often supplies will show up, if at all. We need to ration it. Fairly. Doesn’t matter if your timer says five years or five days.”

That drew a few murmurs, but no strong objections.

“Second—we need leadership. We need someone to keep order, settle disputes, enforce whatever rules we agree on.”

“You mean a sheriff?” someone asked.

Leon nodded. “Call it what you want, but yeah. We need one.”

“I nominate Leon,” a woman said quickly. “He’s calm. Clear-headed.”

Leon raised his hands. “Let’s vote on that in a bit. But there’s one more thing—we need to all contribute. No freeloaders. Everyone takes turns on watch, gathering supplies, cleaning up, whatever we need to do to keep things moving.”

For a while, the group actually seemed united. Some started writing names down. Others went to check on the few boxes of canned goods they’d found behind the cabin. People were talking. Hopeful.

Then Zane stepped forward.

He wore a leather jacket and a scowl.

He hadn’t spoken much the day before. Elias had noticed him in the background—watching, calculating. There was something dangerous in his stillness.

And there was history behind it.

Zane had killed someone before.

He’d been fifteen when it happened. A moment of panic. Rage. A broken bottle, a shove, a scream. The person he’d loved most in the world—his older brother—bleeding out on the kitchen floor after an argument spiraled out of control.

The police said it was an accident. The court wasn’t as forgiving. Juvenile prison. Therapy. Probation.

But Zane never forgave himself.

By eighteen, he’d run. Found shelter in criminal circles. Smuggling. ID fraud. Black market deals. It numbed the guilt. It gave him control over a life that had spun out too fast.

Then came the last job. A fake passport. A flight out of the country. He was done with running—until the plane shattered in the sky and he woke up in this cursed world.

Now he had 1 Month, 4 Days on his wrist. That’s all.

“You want to give me the same ration as some guy with seventy years on his clock?” Zane said, his voice sharp.

Leon turned slowly. “Excuse me?”

“I’ve got a month. He’s got seventy. Why should I starve while he feasts? I should get more. Or be left alone.”

“That’s not how this works,” said a firm voice. Elias turned to see the man they called Kul step forward—muscular, clean-cut, a military posture in the way he stood. “We survive as a group. No special treatment. You follow the same rules as everyone else.”

Zane stepped closer. “You going to force me?”

“If I have to,” Kul said calmly.

The air tensed like a stretched wire.

“I don’t answer to boot-camp leftovers,” Zane spat.

“And I don’t take threats from selfish punks.”

Zane moved fast. Too fast.

He lunged forward, and in one sharp motion, a blade flashed from his sleeve. The group gasped as the knife plunged into Kul’s side.

Blood spilled in a slow arc across the grass.

Kul staggered, clutching his abdomen, eyes wide in shock. He collapsed onto his knees, gasping. “No... no... I...”

“Someone help him!” Elias yelled, running forward.

But there was no first-aid box. Nothing. Kaia searched frantically through a storage box, but there were only scraps of cloth and expired bandages. Nothing to stop the bleeding.

Kul’s breaths grew shallow. His eyes began to glaze. Blood pooled beneath him, soaking the earth.

Then—he was still.

The silence was deafening.

Several people shouted at once, lunging at Zane. He didn’t resist. Maybe he was too stunned. Maybe he didn’t care.

They tackled him to the ground, pinning his arms.

“What the hell is wrong with you?” Leon roared. “You killed him! You killed him!”

“I didn’t mean to—” Zane started.

But then his wrist pulsed.

Everyone froze.

Zane’s watch flickered. A dim glow spread across the screen, and then—numbers shifted.

1 Month, 4 Days changed to 2 Years, 6 Days.

Gasps broke out.

Elias backed away slowly, eyes wide. “His time... it increased.”

Kaia stared in disbelief. “No way. That’s impossible.”

“But it happened,” Liam said. “Right in front of us.”

They all looked down at Kul’s timer—now black. Dead.

Zane’s chest rose and fell quickly beneath the weight of the people pinning him.

“I didn’t know,” he said, dazed. “I swear I didn’t know it would—”

“Liar!” someone shouted.

“He took his life—and got time for it,” Leon said darkly. “That’s what this place is. A game. A trade.”

“No,” Elias whispered. “It’s worse than that.”

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app

Latest Chapter

  • THE WEIGHT OF JUSTICE

    The air was thick with tension.Inside the community hall—an abandoned gymnasium now repurposed for meetings—the crowd stood in uneasy silence. Makeshift lanterns swayed gently from ceiling hooks, casting flickers of light over anxious faces. A few people whispered, but most simply stared ahead, waiting.Kaia sat slumped on a wooden bench, her wound freshly bandaged, her body weak and sore. She didn’t look at anyone. Not at the murmuring crowd, not at Elias who hovered nearby, and certainly not at Leon, who stood at the front with the authority of a self-appointed judge.It had been barely an hour since Elias had found her crawling from the storage room, bleeding and gasping, her clothes torn and her eyes wild with pain. He had carried her to safety, shouting for help. The others had gathered quickly. They listened as Kaia, trembling and pale, told them what happened—that she had been attacked, that she had defended herself, and that she hadn’t meant to kill.But when they checked her

  • THE CONSEQUENCES OF SURVIVAL

    Kaia felt the weight of her body crash against the cold, hard floor. Each breath felt as if it were drawn through a tight, constricting hole in her chest. Her body burned with the memory of the violence she had endured only hours earlier. She could feel the blood from her wounds sticking to her clothes, the ache of her ribs bruised from the struggle, the sharp pain in her shoulder where the man’s grip had crushed her. But none of that compared to the emotional toll—the shame, the fear, and the confusion that kept swirling in her mind like a storm that wouldn’t stop.The man had been more than an attacker. He had been a reminder of the danger lurking in every corner of this strange, lawless place. The assault, the fight for her life, was only the beginning. She had killed him—self-defense, yes, but something deeper gnawed at her soul. Had she killed him because he had hurt her, or had she killed him because she wanted his time?The thoughts circled relentlessly in her mind as she dragg

  • THE ECHOES FROM THE PAST

    Kaia never thought she'd find herself back in that place again—not physically, but emotionally, mentally, in the twisted, nightmarish loop of helplessness. It was the same sick feeling. The same overwhelming panic. The same disbelief.She had been fourteen.It was a rainy afternoon, and her parents had friends over for a small gathering. One of them—her father’s longtime business associate, a man named Ronan—had asked Kaia to help him fetch a book from the study. She had hesitated, but her father nodded encouragingly. "He just needs help finding something," he said.The study was at the far end of the house, quiet, too quiet. When Kaia stepped in and began scanning the shelves, Ronan closed the door behind him. She turned, confused. He smiled.That smile still haunted her."You're growing up so beautifully, Kaia," he'd said, stepping too close.When she tried to move back, he cornered her. His hand brushed against her waist, and when she tried to yell, his palm slapped over her mouth.

  • KAIA'S FOCUS

    Chapter 6 Kaia had only four hours left. Her timer blinked relentlessly on her wrist: 00:04:00:00. Every second felt louder now, echoing in her ears like a ticking bomb. But she wouldn’t spend those final hours trembling or waiting. She needed to make them count. That morning, as the camp stirred under a cloudy sky, Kaia walked with purpose toward the storeroom. The others had gone quiet around her lately—not out of cruelty, but out of helplessness. How do you speak to someone whose life is measured in hours? She had been tasked with checking the food supplies, counting the inventory, making sense of what was left and how long it could sustain them. A task meant for someone who might not live to see its benefit. Still, Kaia welcomed the duty. It gave her something to do—something to focus on. But just before she pushed open the storeroom door, the weight of memory overtook her. She paused, leaning against the wooden frame, eyes fluttering shut as the past surged forward. It had b

  • DIVIDED GROUND

    The sun was just beginning to crest the hills when the group convened again, this time around the charred remnants of a fallen tree near the center of the camp. The air still felt thick with the tension of the previous day’s burial. A few familiar faces were missing—Zane, along with three others whose names Kaia barely remembered. Their absence did not go unnoticed.“They’re with Zane now,” Leon said flatly, scanning the group. “They didn’t show up for breakfast, didn’t show up for cleanup. They’ve made their choice.”Kaia sat on a rock, her elbows on her knees, her body weary. She looked down at her wristwatch. 1 day, 8 hours. The numbers glowed back at her with eerie indifference. Her time was almost gone.Someone had drawn a rough circle in the dirt, organizing where people sat. There were eleven of them now. The meeting had to continue, despite everything. They needed structure. Direction. Safety.“We didn’t finish what we started,” Leon continued. “Yesterday, we tried to organize

  • GRAVES AND RECONING

    The wind swept across the open plain where they had chosen to bury the bodies. The sky was a muted gray, heavy with silence. They had no shovels, so they had used whatever they could find—metal trays, broken seat backs from the crash, even bare hands. The two shallow graves were carved side by side, surrounded by a somber crowd. There were no prayers, no final words. Just silence.Kaia stood with her arms folded tightly around her chest. Her eyes were swollen, her face pale. Some of the others cast glances at her—some sympathetic, some suspicious. After all, death had come fast and brutal to this place.Zane showed up late. His boots crunched against the dry earth as he approached the gathering. All heads turned. The air grew colder.“What are you doing here?” Leon asked, stepping forward. “You here to finish the job?”Zane’s eyes scanned the group, resting briefly on the fresh graves. “I have a right to be here,” he said.“No, you had the right before you stabbed Kul,” someone else m

  • THE FIRST RULE

    They woke up to a strange stillness—too quiet for a world that looked alive. The sun was just beginning to rise, casting a faint orange glow over the endless grassy plain. Dew clung to the cabin’s broken windowpanes, and for a moment, it felt like they had all dreamed the day before.But then Elias saw the body. Kul had helped move it during the night, wrapping it in a dusty tarp from one of the sheds. It now lay silently under the trees just beyond the cabin. A reminder. The countdowns were real.Inside, the others were stirring. Kaia sat alone in the far corner, her knees drawn to her chest, staring blankly at the floor. Her timer still showed 2 Days, 8 Hours. Elias didn’t disturb her. She hadn’t said a word since last night.“Everyone up,” a man called out. Elias turned to see Leon, the older man with graying hair, standing with his arms crossed. “We need to meet. Now. Out front.”Within minutes, everyone gathered outside, forming a loose circle under the early morning light. Some

  • THE COUNTDOWN BEGINS

    The silence after the man’s death wasn’t just heavy—it was suffocating. Elias couldn’t look away from the lifeless body sprawled on the grass. The man’s timer, once bright with the final moments of his life, now displayed a black, empty void. No numbers. No light. Just a dead screen, like a lamp that had gone out forever. Someone had died—because their timer hit zero. It wasn’t a coincidence. It wasn’t symbolic. It was real. “What the hell is this place?” a man muttered near Elias, pacing back and forth with his hands in his hair. “Where are the cities? The roads? What is this timer thing? Who’s doing this to us?” No one had an answer. But the fear, the panic—it was spreading like fire. Kaia, a girl with sharp cheekbones and unsteady hands, leaned against a tree and stared down at her wrist. Her lips were pale. She was whispering numbers beneath her breath. Elias stepped toward her slowly. “How long do you have?” She blinked at him, her breath catching in her throat. “

  • SILENCE

    The world should have ended with the plane crash.Elias Ward had braced himself for the inevitable impact, his heart hammering in his chest as the plane dipped and jolted through turbulent skies. He had heard the screams of passengers, the rapid whoosh of air, and the sharp clang of overhead compartments flying open. Then, as if the universe itself had decided to hold its breath, the noise stopped. Everything went dark. When Elias finally opened his eyes, the first thing that hit him wasn’t the aftermath of a crash — there was no wreckage, no twisted metal, no fire. It was the silence. A silence so thick, it felt like the world had simply paused. He sat up slowly, blinking against the strange light that bathed everything around him. A pale blue sky stretched endlessly above, not a cloud in sight. The air was still, cool but not cold. His hands touched the ground, damp grass prickling against his palms. The oddest thing? There was no sign of the plane. His breath caught in his throa

Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App