LA ÚLTIMA MUJER EN LA TIERRA Y SU SECRETO | RESUMEN COMPLETO !
The story begins with a young woman named Anne, who lives completely alone in a vast valley. The reason: the entire planet was hit by a nuclear disaster. The radiation spread everywhere, and that’s why Anubierta was covered from head to toe as if she were wearing a protective suit. No part of her skin is left exposed; she doesn’t intend to take any risks.
Every day he walks to the nearest city to rummage through empty shops and abandoned shopping centers in the hope of finding some food. Upon returning, he performs a meticulous cleaning ritual, spraying and rubbing himself with disinfectants, as if he wants to erase any trace of danger. Her only companion is her dog, and Ann’s life is summed up in silence and monotony, without electricity, without people around, just her, the animal, and an endless routine.
Everything is always the same until one day, while walking her dog, she sees something different: a vehicle. But it’s not an ordinary car, it looks like a tiny camper van. Upon looking out, he finds personal belongings. Someone was living there. The owner does not appear until moments later when he sees him approaching from a distance.
He wears a huge protective suit against radiation. It’s so cumbersome that it’s surprising to see him walking inside it. An hides and watches him. The man takes out a device to measure radiation and discovers something unexpected. In the valley the air is safe. Then he takes off his suit with relief, screams as if he had been waiting for this moment for years, and runs towards a lake under a waterfall to bathe.
But Han panics. That water comes from outside and could be contaminated. An runs desperately and yells at him to get out of the water. John, that’s the man’s name, immediately gets out, runs to his vehicle, takes a syringe and injects an emergency dose into his body. Then he hands another one to An and gives her clear instructions.
Burn my clothes, give me these injections daily, and if I don’t survive, destroy my body too. Raw but accurate. She takes him to her house, sprays him with disinfectant as if she were cleaning a car, and lays him on the bed. The guy is in very bad shape. The next day, Ann checks her van, finds more doses, and continues to take care of him.

Even so, John still looks terrible, on the verge of death. Desperate, An goes to the abandoned church in the village and prays fervently for him to pull through . Loneliness consumes her, and she cannot bear the thought of losing someone who could stay with her. Then she returns home, milks her cow, and prepares breakfast for John.
He is slowly starting to improve. Over time, John opens up and tells her that he is a scientist. During the nuclear attacks he worked in an underground laboratory where he was protected, but he could no longer stand the confinement. I missed the sun, the air, even if it wasn’t entirely pure. That’s why he went outside. Tell your story.
Everyone in the valley, including his father, left one day in search of survivors. No one returned, only his younger brother remained, who at 13 years old insisted on going out to look for them. After two weeks of waiting, she tried to stop him, but he didn’t listen and left. If he is still alive, he would be 14 years old now.
As the days go by, they both create a routine: sleeping, waking up, and getting to know each other better. On one of those days, An is working in the garden and John asks her why she doesn’t use the tractor. She replies that she’s out of fuel. He tells her that the town’s gas station could still serve, even without electricity.
He shows her how to pump fuel manually, and it works. An jumps for joy and, as a thank you, prepares a special dinner for him. Spinach. It won’t be a feast, but it’s a huge gesture for her. They have dinner together and John falls asleep in his room. Before going to bed, Anne peeks in to watch him sleep and it’s clear that she’s starting to feel something she’s kept hidden for a long time.
That same night, John gets up to go to the bathroom and accidentally catches a glimpse of something in An’s room. He notices it immediately and looks away, but she notices it too. The next day, Ann fishes in the river and serves John grilled fish. She is a true survivor. She plants, cooks, fishes, and maintains her cleaning rituals as if nothing were amiss.
Later, John asks her if the water in the valley is safe and she reassures him, saying that it comes from a completely clean underground water well . Hanle then recounts how tough last winter was . This year he planted much more so as not to repeat that nightmare. The only problem is that there’s nowhere to store everything.
Without electricity there is no refrigerator or freezer. The generator I had is beyond repair. John checks the generator and confirms that it is beyond repair. Then he has a brilliant idea: to build a water turbine at the nearby waterfall to generate electricity. She’s surprised that he knows how to do it, and he replies proudly, “I’m an engineer, but there’s a problem.
They need large quantities of wood, and they don’t have the necessary tools to cut and shape logs from the forest.” On their way home, they pass by the old church in the valley, and John comes up with another idea: using the wood from the church for the project. An is stunned. Dismantling the church her father built.
John tells her to look at it another way. Perhaps that was God’s purpose, that her father erected that structure so that one day it would serve as salvation. An doesn’t know what to think. The next morning, the routine continues. John collects the eggs, they have breakfast, and An heads to the church. There, she sits down at the piano and plays a melody.
But as she plays, she notices a strange reflection in the mirror. It seems as if someone is behind her. She turns around immediately, but there’s no one there. Later, she asks John why he left the church so quickly, but he doesn’t understand what she’s talking about. Anne drops the subject, and that evening she cooks a chicken for dinner, but John is distant.
It’s clear he has feelings for her, even though He still doesn’t openly acknowledge it. On one of his walks with the dog, An finds a trap that isn’t his. Shortly after, he encounters a stranger who introduces himself as Caleb. He claims to be no threat and asks for her trust. An senses he poses no danger and takes him to her home.
Seeing him arrive with another man, John reacts immediately. He grabs his rifle as if he were in the Wild West. An calms him down and assures him that Caleb has no ill intentions. Even so, John checks him with his radiation detector, and the device confirms he’s clean. Caleb explains that he survived because he was working in an underground mine during the attacks.
John, still suspicious, asks him what he plans to do now. The visitor replies that he just wants to spend a night resting and then continue on his way. John insists he stay at least two nights to recover. Although John would prefer him to sleep outside, Anne won’t allow it. She invites him to stay inside the house and even serves him dinner.
This time without spinach. John, observing the table, realizes something. Caleb is a believer, just like Ann. During the That evening, John shares an experience. On his journey to the valley, he stumbled upon an abandoned depot, and upon returning to his van, he found a boy, about 13 or 14 years old, eating his supplies.
The boy was ill, his stomach swollen from radiation. He begged John to end his suffering. John confesses that he couldn’t do it; he simply left him behind and continued on his way. After hearing John’s story , Caleb shares his own, from when he was trapped in the mine with four other workers. One of them, a huge, violent man, wanted to open the door to see what was happening outside.
The others objected, fearing radiation would enter . The tension escalated until the man lost control and attacked them all. Caleb insists he didn’t intervene; he only watched. After the massacre, the man left the mine, and some time later, he too escaped, wandering until he reached the valley.
An, moved, tells him she’s very sorry for what he went through. John, however, bites his tongue. He can’t stand An showing so much empathy toward Caleb and feeling that she’s… That night, John takes her aside and warns her that something about Caleb doesn’t sit right with him, that he’s hiding something and could be dangerous, but she doesn’t believe him.
He hasn’t done anything wrong, he hasn’t even said anything suspicious. The conversation takes a turn when Ann asks John if he thinks the boy he left on the road might have survived. John is silent for a few seconds and finally confesses something devastating. That boy was his younger brother. He recognized his face in the family album, and the hardest part is, he admits that he didn’t abandon him, but rather ended his suffering. Then he asks for his forgiveness.
The next day, John decides to go turkey hunting for lunch, and Caleb goes with him. During the hunt, Caleb mentions a nearby town called Anson, where, according to what he heard on the radio, a group of people still live. He even jokes with John, proposing a hunting competition as if it were a challenge between friends.
In the end, Caleb wins, although at dinner he assures Ann that it was John who shot the turkey, trying to make himself look good. During dinner, the topic of the church comes up again . Caleb Caleb tells An that John plans to dismantle the church to build the turbine. John, surprised, clarifies that he never confirmed it, that he was only considering it, but Caleb presses him.
” Really? Isn’t there another building with usable wood?” John insists that the church is the only structure with beams strong enough. Caleb shrugs and replies, “Do what you want.” The next day, the three begin dismantling the church. As they work, it’s clear that Caleb is interested in Ann. John notices it too.
Later, Caleb invites Aninar over and takes the opportunity to get closer to her. He tells her that his father was also a preacher, just like hers. Although he didn’t inherit the same faith, he says that deep down he retains a certain spirituality. Then he asks her if John treats her well. Anne defends him.
She says he’s a good man, helpful, and also an engineer. When they return, they find John still working alone, visibly upset. That night, John confesses to An that if she has feelings for Caleb, he has no problem with her choosing him. She’s taken aback; she doesn’t understand why he’s telling her this. That’s it, but John leaves angrily.
The next day, they install the turbine at the waterfall. The project is almost finished, and as night falls, they celebrate, laugh, dance, and even jump into the lake to enjoy themselves for a while. Back at the house, John openly declares his love for Ann. She hugs him excitedly and takes him to his room.
But as soon as he lies down, John falls asleep. Instantly. Ann, confused, goes to Caleb’s room, and they end up together. The next morning, John gets up early and prepares breakfast. He immediately notices strange, overly close gestures between Ann and Caleb . He serves the food, and Ann, nervously, excuses herself, saying she needs to go to the bathroom.
John looks at Caleb uncomfortably, and Caleb, as if nothing’s wrong, asks what his task is for today. John replies that they have to finish the turbine, and they go out to work together. While they’re adjusting parts, John confesses to Caleb that he never appreciated how special Anasta was until he came into his life. He says that somehow his presence opened his eyes.
He even claims that he encouraged Han to They approached him to ask him to stay and help with the project. Caleb laughed sarcastically, not believing a word. Finally, they took the turbine to the river and started it up. After intense effort, they got the turbine spinning. Electricity returned to the valley, and everyone celebrated, but in the midst of the effort, Caleb slipped twice.
John saved him both times. On the last slip, Caleb smiled strangely, and John stared at him, not quite understanding the gesture. Later, Ann apologized to John for having been with Caleb. He calmly told her not to worry, to leave it in the past, but she insisted that she couldn’t forgive herself.
John replied that the important thing was that Caleb had already left for the town of Hanson. Ann was stunned. Sadness overwhelmed her because Caleb was gone. She went outside and looked toward the valley, hoping to find him in the distance, but he didn’t appear. Meanwhile, John reconnected the electricity to the house.
The refrigerator worked again, and Ann, thrilled, could store food once more. Then she found a At the piano in the barn, she sits down to play and feels a peace she had forgotten. John approaches and sits beside her. They say nothing, simply gazing at each other in silence as the music fills the space. And so the story concludes.
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