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Chapter 9 - Ch9: The Old ways

The heavy metal door creaked as it slowly swung open behind Aiden, whispering its long-forgotten warning into the silence of the ruined library. He stepped inside like a predator entering the den of something larger than himself—silent, alert, every movement controlled and deliberate. His eyes darted across the ruined lobby, scanning every corner and darkened corridor for the glint of movement or the faint drag of an undead footstep.

Shadows crawled across the cracked marble floor, thrown by the last rays of daylight bleeding in through the shattered stained-glass windows high above. Dust clung to the air like ash, disturbed only by the swirl of Aiden's movements. He kept his blade drawn, held low and reverse-gripped in his gloved hand, ready for anything.

He had no reason to assume this place was safe. Libraries were often chosen as temporary shelters for survivors in the early days. Where people went, walkers usually followed. Still, silence reigned. Not even the sound of breathing… aside from his own, measured and calm through the fabric of his balaclava.

He swept the front lobby first—past the collapsed information desk, overturned chairs, and scattered paperbacks that littered the floor like fallen leaves. Aiden moved from shadow to shadow, checking behind columns, under desks, and within hollowed-out display cases. A toppled globe, shattered in half, rolled gently underfoot. He nudged it aside and crept deeper into the interior.

His goal here was clear. Not just maps—though those were vital—but knowledge. The kind that could rebuild a piece of the world, one step at a time.

Crafting guides. Primitive technologies. Farming techniques. Foraging manuals. Cookbooks. Herbal medicine. DIY construction. Manuals on plumbing, electricity, and mechanical systems. Anything and everything the old world had written down in ink and bound in paper that could help a lone survivor not only endure—but thrive.

And he had a secret weapon: the System Inventory.

A glitch, a gift, a leftover from some arcane tech merged with his mind, he still wasn't entirely sure. But it was there—an endless, invisible storage space accessible through his neural interface, called forth by sheer will. No weight. No clutter. No limits. As long as he touched the item with intent, it would be digitized, cataloged, and preserved—forever.

He found the library's central directory—an old touchscreen terminal, long dead. But beside it, bolted to the wall, was an outdated laminated floor map. He traced a gloved finger over it.

"Reference Section… second floor. Archives… basement level. Crafts and DIY… west wing. Perfect."

He headed west first, passing through long-forgotten aisles where bookshelves towered like ancient trees in a silent forest. Their spines, some cracked and crumbling, others pristine beneath layers of dust, glinted faintly in the dying light.

Aiden paused, pulling out a faded red volume titled: "Back to Basics: Traditional Skills for Self-Sufficient Living."

He thumbed through it quickly—water purification, soap making, homemade tools, tanning hides, animal trapping.

"You'll do nicely."

He pressed his hand to the cover and thought: Store.

In a moment, the book shimmered faintly—visible only to him—and vanished into his inventory with a quiet hum of system energy. No weight. No mess. Just neatly categorized into a folder tagged [Practical Survival / Crafting].

He continued like this for over an hour.

One by one, he scanned the shelves for anything of value. Cookbooks detailing food preservation methods. Agricultural handbooks on growing crops in adverse climates. Old military field manuals filled with diagrams of improvised weapons, survival shelters, and terrain navigation. Even a few weathered children's books on foraging mushrooms and identifying medicinal plants. He took them all. A treasure trove of analog knowledge preserved for a digital future.

In the back corner of the west wing, he found an old display set for a summer "Craft & Hobby" event. It had collapsed under a fallen beam, but several books remained untouched beneath the debris. He carefully shifted the beam aside and retrieved three more volumes: "Blacksmithing for Beginners," "Manual Ropework and Knots," and "The Urban Homesteader's Handbook."

Each one was scanned and stored. Each one is a lifeline.

When he had finished with the west wing, he moved toward the stairwell. The air grew colder as he descended to the archives below. His boots echoed faintly on the stone steps as he passed aged murals that depicted the rise of civilization—agriculture, cities, writing. Ironically poetic now.

The basement level was colder. Damper. Mold crept up the walls like slow-moving vines. Aiden drew his flashlight from his belt and flicked it on, casting its pale beam across sealed microfilm cabinets and file drawers marked with city survey maps, zoning regulations, and infrastructure diagrams.

He smiled beneath the mask.

"Jackpot."

He moved from cabinet to cabinet, opening drawers and scanning in maps from decades past. Topographic charts of the region. Pre-collapse city blueprints. Subway lines. Utility networks. Evacuation routes. Even old road atlases. Some were damaged, but many were surprisingly intact.

Each map he carefully unrolled and tapped with gloved fingertips, feeding them into the hungry void of his System Inventory. The interface in his HUD flashed blue with every successful upload:

[New Item Acquired: City Street Map, Sector 9A][New Item Acquired: Water Purification System Diagram][New Item Acquired: Manual - Wilderness Shelter Construction]

Before he left the archives, he took one last scan of the room and stopped at a locked metal cabinet marked with a faded sticker: "Restricted: Local History and Pre-Industrial Technologies."

He pried it open with the edge of his knife.

Inside? Gold.

Not literal gold, but books older than the city itself—handwritten journals, scanned encyclopedias of medieval tools and building methods, illustrated guides to castle construction, ancient weaponry, even full blueprints of siege engines and water wheels.

"The past really does hold the keys to the future," he murmured.

He didn't leave a single one behind.

By the time Aiden climbed back to the first floor, his system inventory had grown by nearly seventy new entries—each one a tool, a skill, a chance at survival.

Night had fallen completely outside. Rain tapped gently against the shattered windows. The world outside was still broken, still crawling with the dead. But Aiden's mind burned bright with purpose.

He now held more than a knife, some gear, and a backpack. He held knowledge.

Power.

He stepped back into the shadows, pulling his hood low and tightening the straps on his gear.

"Let's see what else this world left behind."

And like a whisper swallowed by the night, Aiden vanished into the city's remains—one step ahead of death, and a hundred steps closer to life.

Aiden moved silently under the cover of dusk, his footsteps barely making a sound against the cracked pavement as he approached a nearby hotel. The once-bustling building now stood in eerie silence, its shattered windows and bloodstained exterior a grim reminder of the chaos that had overtaken the world.

He kept low, hugging the wall as he peered through the lobby entrance. Three walkers shuffled aimlessly near the front desk, their decaying forms twitching with restless hunger. Aiden narrowed his eyes. He couldn't risk making noise. Drawing his Bowie knife, he crept through the broken doorway with the patience of a predator.

One by one, he eliminated them with precise, practiced strikes to the base of the skull. The first collapsed silently; the second let out a faint gurgle before falling; the third turned just as he approached, but Aiden was faster—his blade drove deep, silencing it forever.

With the immediate threat gone, he took a moment to breathe and scan the lobby. Old travel brochures were scattered across the floor, smeared with dried blood. The air was thick with dust and the faint metallic stench of decay.

He moved quickly, checking door after door until he found one that wasn't locked. Room 104. The door creaked slightly as he pushed it open, but he stepped inside with caution, ready for anything.

The room was empty—at least at first glance. The curtains hung torn and ragged, swaying slightly from a draft coming through a cracked window. Furniture was in disarray, and shattered glass crunched softly beneath his boots. But what caught his eye most was the dark, smeared trail of blood that led from the bathroom and out through the doorway, disappearing into the hallway.

Kneeling down, Aiden examined the trail. It looked like someone—or something—had dragged themselves along the floor. Likely the room's last occupant, bitten and transformed, had crawled out, searching for prey.

He didn't want any surprises.

Aiden turned and shut the door firmly behind him. He shoved a nearby dresser in front of it, using all his strength to wedge it into place. Then, working methodically, he scavenged the room for anything he could use to reinforce his shelter for the night.

A small table went against the window. He flipped a chair and stacked it atop the table, then used a second chair and what remained of a nightstand to create a crude barricade. It wasn't elegant, but it would do. For extra security, he tore down the curtain rods and jammed them through the dresser handles, forming an improvised lock.

Satisfied, he took a seat in the far corner of the room, his back to the wall and his knife still gripped in his hand. Outside, the low groans of distant walkers echoed through the streets, but inside, for now, there was silence.

Aiden allowed himself a moment of rest. One moment of safety in a world gone mad.

[Ding!]

[+ 6 Exp for killing 3 walkers]

Aiden stepped into the room slowly, the hinges of the old wooden door letting out a soft groan as he pushed it open, the sound echoing faintly into the stillness beyond. The air inside was dense and unmoving, touched by the faint scent of old wood, worn fabric, and something faintly metallic—perhaps the lingering trace of rust or the scent of distant rain. He let out a slow breath, his shoulders visibly sinking as if the weight of the entire day had only now fully settled on him.

With a dull thud, his backpack hit the floor, the sound louder than the weight justified. It landed just beside the worn edge of the carpet, barely shifting the air as it dropped—light, almost hollow. A few loose papers escaped from its unzipped pocket, drifting across the floor with a whisper. The canvas bag, mostly empty, had long since stopped carrying anything important. Books, chargers, a crumpled hoodie, even the half-eaten granola bar—they were all tucked away safely in his system inventory, neatly categorized and weightless. The bag slumped into a heap, a meaningless shell of habit, and Aiden mirrored it as he sank down nearby. He stared at it for a moment, his eyes adjusting to the near-total darkness of the room—the kind of pitch black that pressed softly against the skin and seemed to muffle sound. The only illumination came from the faintest suggestion of moonlight, filtered through the gaps in the drawn curtains like the memory of light rather than light itself.

The bed loomed ahead, little more than a vague shape in the shadows. It wasn't made—at least not properly. The sheets were rumpled, tangled near the foot, with one pillow partly crushed under the weight of the blanket that had long since given up on neatness. Aiden moved forward with quiet deliberateness, guided less by sight than by instinct and memory of where things had been earlier. Each step on the wooden floorboard creaked, though he tried to be light-footed, as though the room itself might be disturbed by his presence.

He reached the edge of the bed and stood there for a long moment, unmoving, eyes closed. His fingers flexed at his sides, not in preparation, but in resignation. Then, finally, with the slow, gravity-filled motion of someone surrendering, he lowered himself down. First onto the edge, where the mattress sank slightly beneath his weight, and then he allowed himself to lean back—his spine curving, his shoulders releasing. His body folded into the mattress like it belonged there, like it had been shaped by the same wear that had softened the springs and frayed the sheets.

He lay down fully, limbs stretched just enough to feel the width of the bed, his arms spread loosely, palms down against the cool surface. His head settled into the pillow with a soft, sighing sound, hair fanning slightly in every direction. The darkness around him deepened. It wrapped around his form like an old coat, familiar and quiet, stripping away the distractions of color and shape until there was only the gentle hum of silence and the pulse of his breath. No thoughts clamored for attention. No images danced behind closed eyelids. Only the softness of the sheets beneath him, the faint rustling of fabric as he shifted minutely to find that one perfect stillness, and the slow, grounding rhythm of his own heartbeat in his ears.

In that moment—utterly alone, cloaked in shadow, surrounded by the intimate hush of the night—Aiden was not lost, nor found, but suspended, as if the universe had briefly paused to allow him this fragment of peace.

[For every 500 Power Stones, I'll release an extra chapter! Plus, enjoy double chapter releases every Saturday!]

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