Y/n somehow arrives in a struggling industrial town during the Great Depression. Walking through town, she notices a sign on a porch advertising children for sale.
In the wake of a global extinction caused by a deadly virus, the last hope for humanity lies in Project Nova—a network of ten isolated, high-tech bases scattered across the world. Each base houses hundreds of genetically engineered embryos carrying immunity to the disease, along with one immune teenager chosen to raise them. (Kinda like the I am Mother plot).
At the dawn of Earth, a mysterious immortal girl is born alongside the very first life in the oceans. She does not age like other beings, growing only slightly over millions of years, but her mind remains curious and childlike. The ocean raises her, and all early life is drawn to her presence.
After being thrown back to 1826 Tennessee, y/n is injured and found by a widower living on a farm with his children. With nowhere else to go and no way to explain who she really is, she stays while recovering. Eventually, however, the town begins to gossip. He offers marriage—not out of love, but as a practical solution.
After a transatlantic flight from Spain to Chicago crashes into a remote island due to catastrophic engine failure, y/n wakes up in the wreckage as one of the only survivors. With no rescue in sight, limited resources, and the crushing weight of responsibility, y/n must fight to stay alive while protecting two children who depend entirely on her.
In a post-apocalyptic world overrun by the undead (set in The Walking Dead universe), a solitary survivor y/n takes temporary shelter in an abandoned school—only to discover three very young children left behind.
After accidentally witnessing a secret arms deal in an abandoned train yard, a young girl, y/n, is kidnapped by a criminal organization before she can escape. With her father hearing her abduction over the phone but unable to stop it, she is taken and forced into a hidden world where children aren’t protected—they’re used.
In a near-future war, the government enforces a mass conscription program, taking civilians between the ages of 15 and 35 and forcing them into military service. Recruits are stripped of their identities and sorted into specialized factions based on their physical abilities, intelligence, and psychological traits.
After WWlll started parents began sending their children off to a place rumored to be a safe haven for those under 18, but it wasn’t as great as promised
Y/n and their colleagues find the Stork baby machine long after the Storks are gone. They have no idea what it is until someone accidentally turns it on…
College student y/n finds out she’s pregnant and rather than being supported, she’s forced to start this new life far away from the only one she’s ever known.
On a supply run through an abandoned highway, y/n discovers a dying man and a crying infant left beside him. She takes the baby and the burden that comes with it, continuing alone through a collapsing world where every delay can be fatal. Weeks later, she finds another abandoned child with a note begging someone not to leave her behind.
Six years ago—on an ordinary afternoon when she was eleven—something in her changed. Injuries stopped lasting. Cuts sealed themselves before they could bleed. And worse than that, jagged golden lines burned themselves into her skin.
A girl barrels around a corner, distracted and running late, and slams straight into a man hard enough to nearly knock them both off their feet. She doesn’t recognize him. For a man who is used to being stopped and stared at, the absence is jarring. He waits for it, that flicker of realization. The widened eyes. It never comes.
A daycare teacher wakes up in a medieval city with no idea how she got there or any idea on how to get home. With no options left and few skills in this foreign past she begins helping at a church that takes abandoned infants.
The Last Safe House During a war/plague, rumors spread about a woman who takes in children no matter where they come from. Her house slowly becomes overcrowded with babies, toddlers, teens, siblings, and orphaned infants.
An overlooked and neglected young girl finds a lost phone and answers a call, unknowingly stepping into a dangerous criminal world. As she’s pulled deeper into their operations, she must navigate a life where kindness is transactional, trust is fragile, and survival depends on staying small, quiet, and useful.