Aiden sat on a rusted metal bench, his back against a cold pillar inside the dead heart of the mall.
The fluorescent lights above had long since flickered out, leaving only the natural grey light that poured in from the shattered skylights high above, dust drifting slowly like falling ash in the stillness. The mall had gone quiet again. Too quiet.
In front of him, laid out in a grotesque, macabre sprawl, were sixty-five walker corpses, stacked and arranged like cordwood across the tiled floor of the mall's central atrium. A few limbs twitched involuntarily—muscles still firing their final, meaningless spasms. Heads bashed in. Necks severed. Holes punched straight through eye sockets or driven upward beneath the jaw. Each one had been dispatched by Aiden's hand.
The blood was thick across the tiles now, dark and smeared in lazy arcs where he'd dragged the bodies into a single pile. His gloves were stained with a blackish red. His boots, too. Even the reinforced edges of his tactical pants bore the marks of a long day of necessary violence.
But he wasn't bothered.
Instead, he sat calmly chewing through a self-heating MRE pouch—chicken teriyaki with brown rice, piping hot from its chemical heater. The scent of artificial soy and spices cut sharply through the iron tang of blood.
This wasn't some gory trophy collection. Aiden wasn't showing off. No… this was procedure. A ritual. A process of cleansing and reclaiming.
Every walker dragged into that pile had been searched. Not just frisked—but meticulously looted.
He'd worked the atrium in concentric circles, circling through the upper and lower levels of the mall. One walker at a time, he'd dispatched them—then dragged the corpse to the pile, looting as he went.
Pockets, backpacks, purses, belts, even shoes. Aiden checked everything.
What did he find?
• Pennies, nickels, dimes—insignificant to the old world, but copper and metal now had value. They could be melted down or repurposed.• Crumpled bills—worthless as currency, but perfect fire-starting material. Paper money burned hot and fast.• Lighters, half-full or dead. Aiden kept them all. The flint alone could be reused, and one good spark was worth more than gold out here.• Smartphones, some smashed, some intact. Spare batteries, SIM cards, and circuit boards could be harvested. Useful tech always had a future purpose.• Watches, most broken, but a few still ticking. Analog. One of them had a functioning compass bezel.• Pocket knives, most dull, a few broken—but parts could be scavenged. Blades replaced. Hinges repaired.• Keys. Dozens of keys, from car fobs to house keys, now meaningless—unless he found matching locks. He stored them anyway. Just in case.• Plastic cards—IDs, membership cards, expired driver's licenses. Pointless now, yet haunting reminders of who these people once were.
📦 System Inventory – Updated
Aiden quietly reached up and tapped the air, pulling open his System Inventory window with a flick of thought.
[Inventory Capacity: Unlimited][Total Items: 611]New Additions (from Walkers):– 13 Lighters (5 functional)– 124 Coins (mixed metals)– 8 Smartphone Batteries– 11 Broken Phones (for tech salvage)– 2 Working Watches– 1 Compass Watch– 19 Paper Cash Bundles (Firestarter use)– 9 Pocket Knives (various conditions)– 28 Miscellaneous Keys– 7 Zippo Fuel Canisters– 1 Necklace with a silver pendant
He paused over the last item—the silver pendant. It was etched with something. A child's initials, maybe. "M.R." He stared at it a long moment before tucking it away. Not everything was useful. Some things were just… human.
Finishing his meal, Aiden drained the last of the warm electrolyte drink that came with the ration. The sweetness clung to his throat like syrup, but it was clean and kept his mind sharp. The hunger in his gut was gone now—replaced by fuel, purpose, and still-burning adrenaline from the earlier fights.
Around him, the silence of the mall was complete again.
No moans.
No dragging feet.
No threat.
He had cleared this place.He had claimed it.
And yet, he felt no joy. No triumph. Just calm. Control. The kind that came only after blood and ash had settled. After life and death had traded places.
With a sigh, he rose from the bench and walked toward the corpse pile, pulling a half-full bottle of lighter fluid from his bag and a Zippo from his chest pocket.
He doused the pile in practiced sweeps. Then flicked the flame.
FWOOOSH.
A pillar of smoke and flame rose as the corpses caught fire, snapping and curling as the oil-soaked rags and clothes went up. The mall filled with the smell of burning rot and old death, smoke rising toward the broken skylight above like a soul being drawn skyward.
He watched until the fire took hold. Until nothing recognizable remained.
Then he turned, drawing up his hood and tightening his gloves.
Time to move again.
The mall wasn't finished giving up its secrets yet.
The mall, once a bustling center of life, was now a cathedral of dust and echoes. The broken skylights above bathed the corridors in shafts of late-afternoon light, casting ghostly shadows that stretched between shattered storefronts and torn signage. The air smelled of rust, old metal, and dried blood.
Aiden moved with purpose—silent, calculating, and methodical.
He had already cleared the grocery store and sports/outdoors supply shop, but the rest of the mall remained untouched. That meant opportunity.
With the map of the mall memorized and his system pinging faint loot markers like sonar pings in his HUD, Aiden began his next sweep—one store at a time.
1. Pharmacy – "WellSpring Rx"
A small corner store tucked near the food court, most of its shelves had been raided, but Aiden dug deeper.
Loot Acquired:
17 packs of gauze and sterile bandages
9 bottles of rubbing alcohol
3 bottles of ibuprofen
2 small boxes of antibiotics
4 disposable lighters
1 battery-powered thermometer
12 unopened energy drink bottles
1 first-aid backpack (added to System Inventory for quick pulls)
2. Clothing Retailer – "UrbanLoom"
Mostly useless fashion… but Aiden wasn't hunting style—he was looking for materials, layers, insulation.
Loot Acquired:
3 thermal undershirts
2 water-resistant jackets (cut into makeshift rain tarps)
8 pairs of wool socks
1 sewing kit with threads, buttons, and zippers
2 pairs of insulated leggings
1 heat-retaining beanie
5 scarves (can double as wraps, makeshift bandages, or fuel)
3. Toy Store – "Star Planet"
At first glance? Worthless. But Aiden knew better—plastic, batteries, wiring, and distractions all had value.
Loot Acquired:
12 AA and 8 AAA batteries from display toys
1 RC car (usable for future distractions or trap triggers)
3 plush toys (repurposable as sound-muffling cloth or comfort item)
5 boxes of strong plastic figurines (scrap for crafting parts)
Glow sticks and snap lights
1 toy parabolic speaker with voice modulation (potential trap tool)
4. Electronics Store – "VoltHub"
Smashed screens and shattered glass were everywhere, but the backroom held treasure.
Loot Acquired:
2 solar-powered power banks
1 handheld walkie-talkie set (range: 5 miles)
6 various phone chargers
2 cracked tablets (salvageable for processors and screens)
Spools of copper wire
Soldering kit
Spare capacitors, resistors, and microchips
1 external hard drive (might contain useful schematics)
5. Hardware Store – "FixIt Supply"
This one was gold. Aiden nearly grinned as he stepped over fallen nails and broken shelving.
Loot Acquired:
3 crowbars
2 hammers
5 boxes of assorted nails and screws
2 rolls of paracord
1 portable propane burner
4 fuel canisters
Duct tape, super glue, zip ties
1 emergency tool belt
1 steel shovel (foldable, fits into a backpack)
1 toolbox with essential hand tools
[DING!] Crafting Materials: Major Increase – New Blueprints Unlocked
6. Shoe Store – "StrideEdge"
Mostly picked clean, but a back storage room still held untouched inventory.
Loot Acquired:
2 pairs of waterproof boots
3 high-performance running shoes
1 roll of foot powder
4 thermal insoles
Extra laces (doubled as ties or traps)
1 boot repair kit
7. Bookstore – "PageTurner Books"
Aiden couldn't skip this one. Knowledge was power—and the system rewarded him for learning.
Loot Acquired:
6 books on mechanical engineering
2 books on herbal medicine
3 survival guides
1 detailed archery manual
1 DIY trap-building book
1 first-edition copy of The Art of War (System marked it as "Strategic Intelligence Text")
2 notebooks, pens, and a still-working calculator
[DING!] Learned from 3 books+3 INT, +2 WIS
8. Fast Food Kiosk – "Burger Blast"
Rotten… except for the deep freezer and soda machine compartments.
Loot Acquired:
12 cans of sealed soda
6 pounds of frozen beef and chicken (stored instantly in Inventory – timeless)
1 industrial kitchen knife
1 cast-iron skillet
Cooking oil in sealed containers
Salt, sugar, and ketchup packets
Fire-starting grease trays
9. Home Goods Store – "LivingNest"
This place was filled with supplies others didn't think to grab.
Loot Acquired:
4 blankets
2 sleeping bags
Candles, matches
2 large plastic containers with snap lids (used to organize gear in base)
Water purifying pitcher with spare filters
Paper towels, toilet paper
1 portable shower bag
Bug repellent spray
2 mirrors
Rope, curtain rods (repurposable)
📦 System Inventory Snapshot – Post Spree
Total Items: 1,203– Food: +200 lbs. (frozen, canned, dry)– Medical: Fully stocked field kit and spares– Tools: Advanced hand tools, salvage gear, trap parts– Books: 17 total – including 10 unread– Weapons: Katana, M9 w/ 3 mags, Composite Longbow w/ 30 arrows– Electronics: Repairable devices, salvage parts, communication tools– Clothing: Full sets of base-layer, thermal, and tactical gear– Base Supplies: Bedding, cook gear, containers, hardware
By the time he finished, the sun had begun its slow descent behind the jagged Atlanta skyline. The mall was silent but full of unseen riches tucked safely into the folds of Aiden's system space.
He stood at the top floor railing of the atrium now, watching the burned bones of the walker pile still faintly smoking.
The full moon hung high in the bruised sky above, casting its pale light through the fractured skylights of the mall like the eye of a silent guardian. Shadows danced in every corner, long and haunting, stretching from the bones of fallen walkers to the jagged shelves of ruined stores. The silence was near-perfect now, broken only by the occasional creak of the building settling under the weight of time, or the distant hiss of wind sweeping through broken glass and crumbling vents.
Aiden stood still for a moment at the edge of the second-floor balcony, the cool light of the moon painting the contours of his face beneath the black fabric of his balaclava. His breath was even, steady. The day had been long—filled with blood, sweat, tension, and reward—but there was one more place he had to visit before he could afford to let his guard down. His grip tightened around the flashlight in his gloved hand, the beam cutting through the heavy darkness ahead like a silent spear.
His boots made minimal noise as he moved along the abandoned corridor, sticking to the tiled wall and ducking under exposed support beams. He knew the layout now, every stairwell, every broken tile, every dead kiosk and shattered vending machine. The mall was a husk of its former self, yet it had begun to feel oddly familiar—like a half-claimed territory waiting to be shaped.
At the far end of the upper level, tucked behind a service corridor and hidden behind a half-ajar metal door with faded lettering, was the mall's security room. The sign had been scorched by time, but the reinforced door remained intact—a heavy steel slab bolted into a concrete frame. Aiden stepped inside cautiously, flashlight flicking across the control panels, security monitors, and office clutter. Dust floated in the air like lazy ash, disturbed only by his presence. The monitors were all dark, cracked or dead, but that didn't matter. What did matter were the shelves, the lockers, and the drawers—untouched by looters, sealed off by obscurity.
He moved quickly and quietly, scanning every inch. The lockers yielded some light body armor—armored shoulder pads, a padded riot vest he stored into the system space for later use, and a key ring with access cards, though he wasn't sure they'd still work. Aiden rummaged through drawers and filing cabinets, gathering a few batteries, spare keys, a flashlight charger, and several unopened water bottles and protein bars, likely kept as emergency rations.
One of the back compartments held a first aid kit still intact, and in a wall-mounted cabinet, Aiden found what might've once been a firearm—now rusted and jammed beyond use. Still, he stripped it for parts. Every spring, every bolt, every piece of metal was stored.
Satisfied but not careless, Aiden backed out of the room, then sealed the steel door shut with a few boards he pried from a nearby maintenance closet, wedging them into the frame. He reinforced the hinges with zip ties and wrapped the doorknob with cloth to muffle any metal-on-metal noise if it were jostled. He wasn't trying to make it impenetrable—just quiet. Safe enough for one night.
He pulled the worn, dark-blue duffel bag from his back, dropping it with a soft thud beside the corner of the room. From the system space, he retrieved his bedroll and unrolled it onto the far side of the room, furthest from the door, with the wall behind him—standard tactic. He wasn't going to wake up with something crawling over him.
Sitting cross-legged in the dim halo of his flashlight, Aiden took out a sealed container of beef stew and a pouch of purified water. The system inventory kept food unspoiled, which made every bite taste like it was packed yesterday. He warmed the meal slightly using a chemical heater he'd salvaged from the outdoors store earlier that day. The scent of meat and vegetables filled the room, and for the first time in hours, he allowed himself a moment to breathe.
His shoulders relaxed as he leaned back against the wall, chewing slowly, staring at nothing in particular—just letting the silence envelop him. Beyond the steel door, the mall remained dark and empty. The walkers had been purged. At least for now, this small fortress in the heart of decay belonged to him alone.
When the last bite was gone, and the last sip of water swallowed, Aiden wiped his mouth with a cloth, checked the chamber of his M9, and set it within arm's reach beside the bedroll. He shrugged out of his tactical jacket, leaving on his gloves and boots—just in case. He slid into the bedroll, pulling it up to his chest, feeling the cold press of concrete through the thin mat beneath him.
Outside, the wind moaned through the building's broken face. Inside, the only sound was Aiden's breathing—deep, slow, steady.
And then sleep took him, like a black curtain falling gently across a battle-worn stage.