The Trap in the Iron Pit
"Sign this part-time contract right now, then get your ass over to the northern industrial zone's underground processing warehouse. If you don't finish tonight, you'll never see a single dime of your military discharge pay."
Eleanor slammed the coffee-stained document onto the greasy dining table, the impact sending a shudder through the cheap plastic surface.
Her sharp, manicured fingernails, painted a garish crimson, stopped barely an inch from my nose.
The thick wrinkles on her face, layered in a heavy, cracking foundation that failed to mask her age, trembled with every word she spoke—a physical manifestation of a lifetime fueled by greed and malice.
I opened my eyes slowly.
The sensation was disorienting.
The howling wind that had torn through my flesh, freezing the marrow in my bones during my past life, was entirely absent.
Instead, the air was thick and oppressive.
Outside the cracked window, the relentless shriek of cicadas cut through the stifling summer heat.
Scorching air forced its way into the rundown apartment, carrying the stench of boiling asphalt and stagnant garbage from the city streets below.
My gaze drifted to the wall calendar.
It was pinned to a date exactly three days before the world ended.
I had regressed.
The memories of my previous demise remained burned into my nerve endings like a branding iron, a vivid record of physical agony.
The history of my exploitation was simple and brutal.
After my mother died of a lingering illness, my grandfather left behind an ancestral plot of land on the desolate edge of the northern industrial zone.
On paper, the municipal zoning boards listed it innocuously as a heavy machinery testing ground.
But after my father married Eleanor, this woman and her two biological children turned our household into a meat grinder of relentless psychological and financial exploitation.
They had already forcefully embezzled the entire $300,000 discharge payout from my years of military service as a mechanic.
Every dollar had been squandered to fund her lazy, drug-addled biological kids, who spent their days drag racing modified sports cars and accumulating debt.
Yet, that was not enough for them.
To legally seize the final plot of ancestral land remaining under my name, they had engineered a lethal structural trap.
The heavy machinery underground processing warehouse on that land had been abandoned for decades.
On the old, restricted municipal planning blueprints, it was explicitly flagged as a high-risk hazard on the verge of total structural collapse.
Eleanor’s plan was simple:
use my withheld discharge pay as leverage to force me down into the subterranean facility, intending for a localized structural failure to bury me alive.
With my death ruled an industrial accident, they would legally inherit the land title without opposition.
In my past life, numb from years of service and family gaslighting, I complied.
I took my heavy tool packs down into that dark iron pit, attempting to manually realign massive hydraulic linkages that were long past saving.
Then, the anomaly occurred. Without warning, the global ice age struck.
Surface temperatures plummeted from a sweltering summer high to minus sixty degrees Celsius within a matter of hours.
Locked inside a subterranean concrete vault with no heating, no stockpiled rations, and zero communication with the surface, I froze to death.
My fingers had snapped bone by bone against the sub-zero iron as I desperately tried to scale the frozen steel ladders to the surface.
Standing directly behind Eleanor, my half-brother Jeffrey leaned against the peeling wallpaper, a unlit cigarette dangling from his lower lip.
He let out a harsh, rasping sneer.
"So what if you're a veteran? Out here, you're still just a dog crawling into a hole. Finish the job by midnight, or you won't see a single penny of that money."
His sister, Chloe, sat on the arm of the frayed sofa nearby, fiddling with a newly bought luxury leather handbag.
She did not bother to lift her eyes from the gold-plated hardware, her voice dripping with an innate disgust.
"He reeks of motor oil and sweat.
It’s disgusting.
Mom, just make him sign the waiver fast so he can get out of our sight.
The real estate appraiser is coming this afternoon to verify the land title for the listing."
Looking at their twisted, greedy faces, I felt no surge of anger.
Anger requires an investment of emotional energy, and who wastes anger on the dead?
These short-sighted fools had no conception that in exactly seventy-two hours, the entire cradle of modern human civilization would be violently ripped apart by a catastrophic super-blizzard of planetary proportions.
The surface of the earth would transform into a lifeless, pressure-cooked hell of ice at minus sixty degrees.
More importantly, they did not understand the true nature of the underground processing warehouse they viewed as a convenient execution trap.
Its public listing was a fabrication. In reality, it was a Cold War-grade reinforced bunker built seventeen meters underground by a secret federal military-industrial conglomerate during the height of the mid-century nuclear arms race.
It featured independent, Tier-3 nuclear blast and radiation protection specifications.
The main frame of the subterranean complex was welded from dual-layer, two-centimeter-thick rolled homogeneous armor steel plates, separated by a one-meter-thick core of high-density, radiation-proof barite concrete.
With sufficient fuel, provisions, and mechanical fortification, that abandoned iron pit was the only perfect, impregnable fortress within a hundred miles capable of sealing out the extreme drop in temperature and external structural impacts.
It was a literal doomsday ark.
"Fine. I'll sign."
I let out a flat, humorless laugh.
Without wasting another second on negotiation, I took the cheap ballpoint pen and decisively signed my name across the contract lines.
Before Eleanor could mask the look of stunned contempt flashing across her face, I snatched the signed documents and the heavy brass master control key to the warehouse entrance from her grasp, turned on my heel, and walked out into the corridor.
They believed they were pushing me into a concrete grave.
They had no idea they had just handed me my sole ticket to the new world.
