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Lab Rats Quarantined

The Last Letter of Love

Ayaan, a brilliant yet skeptical scientist, is on the verge of completing a classified time-travel experiment when he discovers a mysterious old letter inside his lab. The letter, written decades ago, is addressed to him by a woman named Zoya—a name he doesn’t recognize. The letter speaks of a deep, unbreakable love and a promise: "No matter what happens, I will always be waiting for you… in another time." At first, Ayaan dismisses it as a prank. But when he begins having strange dreams of a woman he has never met, memories start surfacing—memories that don’t belong to him. Desperate for answers, he activates his experimental time machine and is transported 50 years into the past. There, he meets Zoya, a beautiful, mysterious woman who seems to know him intimately. She has been waiting for him, just like she said in her letter. As they fall deeply in love, Ayaan discovers the painful truth—Zoya belongs to a timeline that was never meant to exist. And every moment they spend together brings him closer to a paradox that could erase both of them forever. Ayaan now faces an impossible choice: Save Zoya and risk altering time itself. Return to the present and lose her forever. But when he finds out that Zoya wrote one last letter—one that holds the secret to breaking the cycle—he realizes that love might be the only force greater than time itself. Will their love defy the laws of time, or will Zoya remain nothing more than a fading memory in a lost timeline?
Bilalmalik · 759 Views

Creed: World’s Strongest

“You’ve been researching for years with nothing to show for it. Why not try something else?” Samia’s tone was sharp, but there was a thread of concern beneath it as she leaned against the doorframe. The room smelled faintly of sterilizing agents, and the rhythmic clicking of keys filled the silence. Dr. Elias didn’t respond immediately. Dressed in his lab coat, he stared at the screen with unwavering focus, his fingers flying over the keyboard. When he finally turned to her, a slow, almost unsettling smile spread across his face. For a moment, he looked like any other scientist lost in his work—until he blinked. The motion was unnatural, his eyelids sliding horizontally across his eyes like a lizard’s. “Samia,” he said, his voice calm but electric with excitement, “I’ve figured it out. This time, it will work.” She opened her mouth to respond, but he was already on his feet, moving past her with an urgency that demanded she follow. They made their way through the sterile corridors of the facility, the fluorescent lights overhead casting a cold glow on the walls. The reinforced chamber was a stark contrast to the rest of the building. Thick steel doors hissed as they opened, and the hum of machinery grew louder as they stepped inside. In the center of the room stood a massive contraption—a web of wires, tubes, and blinking monitors surrounding a sleek, cylindrical core. “What is it this time?” Samia asked, her arms crossed tightly against her chest. Dr. Elias didn’t answer. Instead, he moved with practiced precision, attaching cables and adjusting dials. The air felt heavier here, charged with the anticipation of something monumental—or catastrophic. “Get your goggles,” he said at last, stepping behind the protective glass. He tapped the side of his goggles, the lenses catching the faint blue glow of the machine. Samia hesitated. She had seen him fail before. Years of promises and miscalculations had made her wary, but there was something different in his demeanor this time—something unsettlingly confident. Reluctantly, she turned and jogged back to the lab to retrieve her goggles. The first explosion hit when she was halfway down the hall. The floor bucked beneath her, and she stumbled, her heart leaping into her throat. A deep, resonating boom echoed through the building, followed by a blaring alarm. “Dr. Elias!” she shouted, spinning around. Smoke and dust billowed toward her, and the acrid scent of burning wires filled the air. Part of the ceiling had collapsed, cutting off her path back to the reinforced chamber. And then she saw it. Through the swirling haze, a glowing orb hovered in the wreckage, pulsating with a light that seemed alive. It started small, no bigger than her fist, but it was growing—expanding with an eerie, deliberate rhythm. The hum it emitted was low and bone-deep, vibrating through the air and into her chest. “No, no, no,” she muttered, backing away. Every instinct screamed at her to run. She turned and bolted for the exit, her shoes skidding on the slick floor as she raced against the inevitable. She had barely reached the stairwell when a second explosion ripped through the building. The force of it threw her forward, and she hit the ground hard. Her vision blurred as heat and light engulfed her. Somewhere in the distance, she heard the structure groan as it gave way entirely. Then, everything went black.
Basil_Chaway · 14.9K Views
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