As Aiden continued driving, the city skyline of Atlanta began to peek over the horizon, hazy through the heat and distant smoke. The once-vibrant metropolis now loomed like a silent monument to a fallen world, jagged with broken buildings and haunted by memories of what it used to be.
He stayed on the right side of the divided highway, the asphalt cracked and overgrown in places but mostly clear—eerily so. The road stretched ahead like a desolate artery leading straight into the heart of the apocalypse.
Then, he glanced to his left… and froze.
A chill ran down his spine.
There, on the opposite side of the highway, stretched a long, hauntingly familiar sight: a solid line of abandoned vehicles, bumper to bumper, some smashed together from failed escape attempts, others left with doors flung open, as if people had simply vanished mid-flight. SUVs, sedans, police cruisers, motorcycles—all caught in a single, desperate moment. It looked like a scene pulled directly from a memory, or more accurately… from television.
"The Walking Dead…" Aiden murmured under his breath.
It was just like the show—just like that shot—the long rows of empty cars leading away from the city, a highway choked with the echoes of panic. The contrast between the two sides of the road was staggering: the left lane was frozen in chaos, while the right, where he now drove, was hauntingly clear. A living reminder of how people had fled in terror, clogging the outbound lanes while the inbound remained untouched… until now.
For a moment, it didn't feel like he was just traveling through a ruined world—it felt like he'd stepped into a story. A horror made real.
He slowed the car slightly, staring at the endless line of vehicles. Burnt-out shells, broken windshields, twisted metal. Suitcases lay scattered along the lanes. Stuffed animals. Blankets. Shoes. All remnants of lives lost or left behind.
Aiden exhaled slowly, gripping the wheel tighter.
"How many of them made it?" he whispered, eyes scanning the wreckage. "And how many never got the chance?"
Aiden sighed, long and slow, as the reality of what he was seeing settled into his chest like a stone. The endless line of abandoned vehicles—the desperation frozen in metal and silence—was a grim reminder of just how far the world had fallen. But as the weight of it threatened to pull him into despair, he clenched his jaw and shook his head.
"What's the point of crying?" he muttered to himself, forcing his hands to relax on the steering wheel. "Complaining won't change anything. It's already done."
He took a deep breath, calming his racing thoughts. The dead couldn't be undone, and the past couldn't be changed. But the future? That was still his to shape.
Determined, Aiden pulled the car to a stop on the shoulder of the empty highway. Atlanta was close—he could feel it—but the closer he got, the more dangerous things would become. A running engine was too loud, too obvious. If he wanted to move safely, he'd need to go the rest of the way on foot.
He stepped out into the warm, stale air, taking one last glance at the city skyline in the distance before heading across the divider toward the clogged outbound lanes.
With a practiced eye, Aiden began moving through the sea of cars, targeting notable vehicles—police cruisers, military transports, ambulances, and government SUVs. These were the ones most likely to have useful gear. Sometimes the doors were locked, but a quick jab from his crowbar handled that. Other times, it was as if the occupants had simply vanished, leaving everything behind.
From a squad car, he pulled out a partially loaded pistol, two spare magazines, and a half-used first aid kit. A military Humvee yielded an old, dented rucksack filled with MREs, a combat knife, and a broken pair of binoculars. He took them anyway—even broken things could be useful with the right repair tools. An ambulance gave him a few doses of antibiotics and a sealed pack of medical gloves. He stashed it all in his system inventory, grateful once again for the strange digital space that carried more than his backpack ever could.
In one upscale vehicle, likely belonging to a government official or high-ranking officer, he found a tactical flashlight, a satellite phone with a dead battery, and a hand-drawn map of Atlanta's evacuation zones—folded and marked in red ink.
"Jackpot," he muttered.
Each vehicle was a snapshot of a life interrupted. Some had bloodstains on the seats, others still had photos clipped to the visors. Aiden didn't linger on those.
He just kept moving, looting efficiently and quietly, keeping his ears sharp for groans or shuffles in the distance. The closer he got to Atlanta, the more he knew the dead would be watching. Waiting.
Still, with each item he tucked away, he felt a little more prepared.
He was walking straight into the lion's den—but at least he wasn't walking in empty-handed.
And so it continued.
With each step deeper into the urban sprawl, Aiden pushed forward with calculated caution, moving through the graveyard of a once-bustling world now silenced by death and time. His boots crunched over broken glass and scattered debris, his breathing steady and measured. The dense rows of abandoned vehicles on the highway had begun to thin, giving way to cracked sidewalks, boarded-up gas stations, and the looming skeletal outlines of downtown Atlanta in the distance.
In one hand, he held a Combat knife, the matte-black steel glinting faintly under the overcast sky. In the other, his trusted Bowie knife, its heavy, curved blade stained from past encounters. He moved with both at the ready—close, controlled, and silent. It wasn't paranoia. It was survival.
He kept low, weaving between cars and ruined street signs as the city finally swallowed him whole.
The first thing he spotted as he crossed the invisible line between the outer roads and the city proper was what looked like a pit stop—an old roadside rest area positioned just before the main avenue into Atlanta. It must have served as a staging area during the early days of the outbreak. A last chance for fuel, food, or maybe even hope.
It was half-collapsed now. The windows were shattered, its sign barely clinging to the rusted frame. A faded banner fluttered above the entrance: "Stay Calm. Help Is On The Way."
Aiden scoffed under his breath. "Yeah. Sure it was."
Outside the pit stop stood a small cluster of vehicles, clearly left in a rush. Aiden could tell just by looking—the doors still open, trunks partially closed, bags spilling their contents across the concrete. He approached slowly, crouching low behind a dented van as he scanned the area for any movement. The buildings around him were tall and empty, their windows like dark eyes watching from above. The wind whistled through the narrow alleys between them, carrying with it the faint stench of decay.
He waited. Listened.
No groans. No dragging footsteps.
Clear. For now.
Aiden made his move.
The first vehicle—a rust-red SUV—yielded a few basic supplies: an unopened can of beans, an old hoodie, and a cracked GPS that he tucked into his bag out of habit. The next one, a delivery truck, was more promising. Inside the cab, beneath the seat, he found a small roll of duct tape, a pair of wire cutters, and a mostly-full bottle of painkillers still sealed in plastic.
He stowed everything in his system inventory, grateful once again for the strange technology that let him carry far more than his body could hold.
One by one, he worked through the vehicles, moving efficiently but carefully, never lingering longer than necessary. He checked glove boxes, under seats, and even pulled open floor panels when something looked suspicious. In a black minivan with shattered windows, he found a crowbar wedged into the side of the passenger seat, still wet with dried blood. He took it anyway. Blood washed off. Utility didn't.
Finally, he reached the last vehicle—a military jeep, the insignia barely visible beneath layers of dust and grime. He stepped up to it, cracked the driver-side door open, and froze.
Inside sat the skeletal remains of a soldier, slumped against the steering wheel, helmet still in place. Aiden's eyes narrowed. There was no sign of a bite, no broken windows, no violence. Just… time. Death by abandonment, or perhaps suicide. A lonely end.
He reached into the jeep carefully, lifting the body aside just enough to search. His effort was rewarded: a small satchel beneath the seat, containing a map of the downtown area marked with military checkpoints, a loaded sidearm with two extra magazines, and a folded note that simply read: "Don't go downtown. It's already gone."
Aiden pocketed the map and gun, stared at the note for a long second, then crumpled it and tossed it into the footwell.
"You're probably right," he murmured, "but I'm not here for safety."
He stepped away from the jeep and back into the open lot, glancing once more at the road that lay ahead.
Downtown Atlanta.
The heart of the city.
Where everything could either begin… or end.
Gripping his blades tightly, Aiden took a breath, squared his shoulders, and moved forward—each step deliberate, each sound carefully managed. The city was waiting, and whatever was hiding within its ruined streets, he would face it head-on.
Because there was no turning back now.
Aiden pressed himself against the crumbling brick wall of an old convenience store, his body low and still, eyes scanning every shadow with quiet intensity. He moved with purpose—but with restraint—careful not to waste a single ounce of energy. In a world where danger lurked around every corner and silence was survival, conserving strength was just as important as any weapon he carried.
He paused behind a rusted-out pickup truck, crouching low as he unfurled the worn map he'd found back at the military jeep. Dust blew gently across the paper, but the inked lines were still clear. His eyes locked on his first destination—the largest public library in the city.
But this wasn't just a detour for curiosity or nostalgia.
Aiden had a goal: to find and preserve knowledge from the old world. Not fiction, not politics—real, practical survival knowledge. The kind of information people had used during history's harshest times: the Dark Ages, wartime eras, pioneer settlements, and early industrial periods. Manuals on how to build shelters, grow crops, purify water, repair tools, and survive without electricity or modern tech.
"If they did it back then, I can do it now," Aiden muttered quietly to himself.
He envisioned those old guidebooks—how-to's on carpentry, blacksmithing, foraging, medicine, even basic farming. Books that once sat on shelves gathering dust would now be invaluable blueprints for rebuilding in a broken world.
The library, in his mind, had become more than just a building.
It was a fortress of forgotten wisdom.
And he was going to raid it—not for gold or guns, but for the secrets of survival buried in its pages.
With a final glance around, he folded the map and slipped it back into his jacket, his grip tightening on his knife. Quietly, with the weight of purpose anchoring his every step, Aiden slipped into the shadows and made his way toward the ruins of the library.
Before approaching the library, Aiden knew better than to walk in exhausted, hungry, and mentally worn down. In a world ruled by the dead, preparation wasn't optional—it was survival.
As he crouched behind a rusted-out SUV, eyes locked on the shadowy outline of the library just a block ahead, his gaze shifted to the left. A mid-rise apartment complex stood silent and worn by time, its faded brick walls scorched in places and its upper windows shattered. The metal sign out front still clung desperately to one hinge, reading:
"Crescent Pines Apartment Homes."
It wasn't much—but it was close. And if it had even one room that could be secured, it would give him the chance to rest, eat, and plan his entry into the library with a clear head.
He crept toward the building's entrance, crowbar in one hand, knife in the other. The glass double doors were cracked open, likely pushed ajar by looters or survivors long gone. Inside, the lobby was dimly lit by shafts of sunlight breaking through the grime-streaked windows. Dust motes floated lazily in the air. A water-damaged reception desk stood on the left, and a pair of vending machines—one shattered—flanked the far wall.
He moved cautiously, his footsteps nearly silent on the carpeted floor. Then he froze.
A soft noise.A low groan.That telltale sound of something that should've stayed dead still clinging to unlife.
Walkers.
Aiden pressed himself against the wall and listened. The sound came from the hallway ahead—slow shuffling, the dragging of feet, and the occasional thump of something brushing against the walls. His grip tightened on his weapons. There couldn't be more than a few in this building, not with how quiet it had been outside.
Time to clean house.
He advanced slowly down the hallway, eyes darting between doorways. The first room was empty. The second had a busted door and nothing but old furniture and a collapsed ceiling.
The third?
Occupied.
Inside, three walkers milled aimlessly in what had once been someone's living room. Their backs were to him, their rotting forms dressed in the remains of everyday clothes—jeans, a security uniform, a flower-print bathrobe. Ordinary people once. Now, just echoes of what the world used to be.
Aiden didn't hesitate.
He slipped in quietly and made his first kill fast—a quick stab through the temple from behind. The second turned just in time to receive a powerful swing from his crowbar that caved in its skull with a sickening crunch. The third came at him groaning, arms outstretched. He sidestepped, dodged its grasp, and buried his combat knife deep into the base of its neck, pushing it down to the floor with his full weight until it stopped twitching.
Panting slightly, Aiden stood and surveyed the now-silent room. Blood pooled on the floor, staining the faded carpet. The smell of death lingered heavily in the air. But the apartment, aside from the corpses, was intact.
He moved quickly through the rest of the floor, making sure there were no other surprises. The building had been picked clean long ago, but here and there were signs of old attempts at survival—makeshift barricades, empty food cans, even faded notes left behind by the last tenants. Most of the rooms were either wrecked or unsecured.
But then, on the second floor, he found it—a small one-bedroom apartment near the end of the hall. The door had been closed and locked from the inside, but the tenant never left. A skeleton lay slumped in the corner of the bedroom, wrapped in a moldy blanket, long since passed. No signs of infection. No blood. Just… quiet.
Respectfully, Aiden closed the door to that room and focused on the living area.
It was perfect. The couch, though dusty, was intact. The windows had blinds. The kitchen had a few old canned goods still tucked behind warped cabinet doors. A small table was shoved against the wall with a single chair beside it. Most importantly, the apartment had only one way in.
He quickly got to work.
He jammed the door with a coat rack, pulled a dresser from the bedroom, and wedged it tightly in front. Then he took some scrap wood he'd found in the stairwell and hammered a few planks diagonally across the inside of the doorframe. It wasn't impenetrable, but it would slow anything down that tried to get in—and buy him time.
Only once the place felt secure did he finally allow himself to sit.
Aiden collapsed onto the couch with a groan, his muscles aching, sweat soaking through his shirt. He set his weapons within arm's reach and leaned back, letting the silence settle around him.
From his inventory, he pulled out a can of baked beans and a sealed military MRE. He popped the can open with his knife, eating in small, controlled bites. Every mouthful was fuel. He followed it with half a bottle of water, then a few crackers from the MRE pack.
No fire. No heating.
Just cold food and a moment of peace.
When he finished, he didn't toss the can. He cleaned it, wiped it down, and slipped it back into his system inventory. You never know what could be useful.
Then, finally, he allowed himself to rest.
Head leaned back against the cushion. One arm draped across his chest. His other hand never let go of the knife. The soft creak of the old building, the faint wind whispering through cracked windows, and the distant groan of a world gone mad were his lullaby.
[Ding!]
[6 Exp awarded for killing walkers]