The world had forgotten about cones.
Not traffic cones—those still littered the highways, faded and cracked. Not pine cones—those still tumbled from skeletal trees in the poisoned woods.
This was a waffle cone. Crisp. Golden. Vanilla-scented. The last one on Earth.
Javi found it in the freezer vault of a ruined ice cream parlor, nestled between frost-rimed tubs of flavors no one would ever taste again. His hands shook as he lifted it. The cold bit his fingers, but he didn’t care. He hadn’t seen sugar in three years.
Then the gun cocked behind him.
"Drop it," snarled a voice.
Javi turned. A girl in a patched-up hazmat suit glared at him, her rifle steady. Her name tag read Leyla. Former employee. Probably the one who’d locked this place down before the collapse.
The cone trembled in his grip. He could smash it. Could fight. Could die.
Instead, he snapped it in half.
Leyla’s breath hitched. The gun lowered.
They ate it sitting on the counter, legs swinging like kids at a birthday party, savoring each crumbling bite. Outside, the wind howled through the dead city.
For the first time in years, something was sweet.