The world was a graveyard. Every house they passed was a tombstone, every overturned car a monument to a life cut short. The silence was the worst part. It was a heavy, oppressive thing, broken only by the crunch of their shoes on glass-strewn pavement and the whisper of the wind through broken windows.
Lily clung to Quinn's hand, her small fingers laced tightly with his. She did not cry. She did not speak. She just walked, her eyes wide, taking in the nightmare around them. She was trying so hard to be brave, and it broke his heart.
They moved slowly, sticking to the shadows, using burned-out cars and fallen trees for cover. Quinn's senses were on a razor's edge. Every creak of a shutter, every distant crash, sent a jolt of adrenaline through him. He was no longer just fighting for himself. He was a shield, and Lily was the person behind him.
Their first encounter came less than an hour after leaving the basement. They were cutting across a lawn when a figure stumbled out from behind a large oak tree. It was a man in a business suit, his tie askew, one arm hanging at an unnatural angle. It saw them and let out a low, guttural moan, starting towards them with a slow, shambling gait.
Quinn's reaction was immediate and instinctive. "Lily, behind the tree. Now. Close your eyes and count to twenty," he said, his voice calm but firm.
Lily did as she was told without hesitation, scrambling behind the wide trunk of the oak.
Quinn did not charge. His tactics had to change. He could not risk a prolonged fight, not with Lily so close. He let the creature come to him. As it drew near, he noted its movements. It was clumsy, driven by sight and sound, but there was no strategy, no intelligence in its eyes. It was pure, mindless aggression. The Kael Strain. The codename from a half-forgotten briefing flashed in his mind. Early stage. Fast. Aggressive. Lacks coordination.
When the infected was only a few feet away, he moved. He sidestepped its clumsy lunge and swung the iron poker in a short, brutal arc, striking the back of its knee. The creature went down, and Quinn finished it with a quick, efficient blow to the head. It was over in seconds.
He stood over the body for a moment, his breathing steady, then called out. "Okay, Lily. You can come out."
She peeked out from behind the tree, her eyes still squeezed shut. "Did you get him?"
"I got him," Quinn said. "We're safe."
They continued on, their grim journey taking them deeper into the ruined suburbs. Near a crashed mail truck, Quinn spotted a discarded backpack, a sturdy-looking hiking pack. He picked it up. It was empty.
"Here," he said to Lily. "From now on, we're treasure hunters. We're looking for anything that can help us."
It was a small thing, turning their desperate scavenging into a game, but it worked. Lily's focus shifted. She started pointing out things—a sealed bottle of water lying in the gutter, a can of beans that had rolled under a car seat, a small pry bar from a toolbox that had spilled its contents onto the road. Quinn gathered everything, the weight in the backpack a small but reassuring comfort.
They were moving past a playground when disaster nearly struck. Lily, distracted by the sight of a familiar-looking slide, tripped over a broken tricycle hidden in the grass. She went down hard, letting out a sharp cry of pain.
The sound was like a dinner bell.
Almost instantly, two infected emerged from a nearby house, their heads snapping in the direction of the cry. A third appeared from around the corner. They were runners, their movements fast and jerky.
"Get behind me!" Quinn yelled, shoving Lily behind the relative cover of the slide's metal staircase.
He did not have time to be tactical. He had to be brutal. He met the first one head-on, swinging the poker like a baseball bat. The impact sent the creature sprawling. The second one was on him, clawing at his arms. He shoved it back, creating a precious foot of space, and brought the poker down hard on its head.
The third one was smarter, or maybe just luckier. It ignored Quinn and scrambled directly for the slide, its eyes locked on Lily.
Quinn roared with fury. He left the first creature stunned on the ground and lunged, tackling the third one from the side. They crashed to the ground, rolling in the wood chips. The infected was a frenzy of snapping teeth and clawing hands. Quinn managed to get a hand under its chin, pushing its head back, and drove the pointed end of the poker into its throat.
He scrambled to his feet, breathing heavily, and turned just in time to see the first infected staggering back to its feet. He dispatched it with a final, vicious blow.
Silence returned to the playground, broken only by Lily's frightened whimpers. Quinn rushed over to her. "Are you okay? Are you hurt?"
She shook her head, her face pale. "I'm sorry," she whispered. "I made a noise."
"It's not your fault," Quinn said, pulling her into a hug. "It's okay. We're okay."
But they were not okay. That was too close. He had been reckless. He realized they could not keep moving like this. They needed to rest, to regroup. They needed a plan that went beyond just surviving until the next sunrise.
He scanned the houses surrounding the playground. One stood out. It was a small, single-story house, but its windows were intact, and it had a heavy-looking security door on the front. It looked defensible.
"We're going to rest there for a little while," he said, pointing.
He cleared the house methodically, room by room, finding it blessedly empty. He secured the front and back doors, wedging chairs under the knobs. For the first time in what felt like days, they were in a secure space.
While Quinn took stock of their meager supplies, Lily sat at a small kitchen table. She had found a pad of paper and a box of crayons in a child's bedroom. She was drawing, her small brow furrowed in concentration.
Quinn walked over and looked at the picture. It was a drawing of her family. A smiling stick figure of Mark, one of Sarah, one of Tom, and a tiny one of herself. She had drawn a big, yellow sun above their heads. A perfect, happy family in a perfect, happy world. It was a coping mechanism, a child's desperate attempt to reclaim what had been lost.
He looked from the innocent drawing to the grim reality outside the window. He looked at their small pile of supplies—a few cans of food, three bottles of water, an energy bar. It would not last them more than a day or two.
He needed better gear. He needed real weapons, more food, medical supplies. And he needed a destination. A real plan. Just running was not enough. Running was a slow death. He needed to find somewhere truly safe, somewhere this plague could not reach. He thought of the emergency broadcasts, the garbled messages. Avoid populated areas. It was a clue.
His gaze fell on the poker leaning against the wall. It was a crude, heavy weapon. It had saved their lives, but it was not enough. He needed something better. He needed an advantage. And he knew, with a dawning certainty, that he could not find what they needed in these quiet, suburban houses. He had to go somewhere more dangerous. Somewhere with more resources. But somewhere that would put them at greater risk. The thought settled in his mind, a cold, hard knot of determination. Their first steps were over. Now, the real journey had to begin.