The Next Morning at the Prison
The early morning sun crept through the high windows of the prison, casting golden slats of light across the cracked concrete yard. A cold breeze carried the bite of the coming winter, rustling dry leaves that had found their way into the compound.
All of Aiden's group, along with Rick's people, had gathered outside Cell Block A. The yard was unusually quiet, filled with the tension of unfamiliar faces sizing each other up. Some stood with arms crossed, others leaned against the railing, or watched from the steps. Even among allies, there was a wary energy in the air.
Aiden stood before them all, his arms behind his back, posture firm. His sharp eyes scanned the mixed crowd. Behind him, several of his own fighters flanked the railings with alert watchfulness.
Rick, Daryl, Glenn, T-Dog, and the rest of their group stood close together, quietly watching. They were still adjusting to the prison, to this new leadership dynamic, to Aiden.
Aiden raised his voice, clear and commanding.
"Right. Listen up." His voice echoed slightly off the concrete walls. "We've done well to secure this place. The prison's solid, defensible. A good place to make it through the winter."
He paused, letting the words settle.
"But a roof over our heads won't keep us alive on its own. We need supplies. More than what we have. If we want to survive the winter, if we want to build something real here... then we've got work to do. Starting now."
He took a few steps forward, his boots crunching against grit.
"This will also serve as a test for our new arrivals," Aiden said, glancing toward Rick's group. "We've seen what you're capable of, but it's time to see how well you operate when, stakes are high and decisions are made fast. Out there, it's a different kind of fight."
Rick narrowed his eyes slightly but said nothing. His people shifted uncomfortably.
"We're splitting into four scouting teams. Each group will have four members, three of mine, one of yours."
Aiden turned and nodded toward his right-hand man, who handed him a clipboard.
He began to read off names.
"Group One, led by me, will consist of Glenn, plus Rourke and Silva from my squad. We're heading to Cleveland. It's further out, but there's potential for untouched supply caches in the suburbs."
Glenn glanced up, nodding silently, trying not to show the anxiety on his face.
"Group Two will be led by Kellin," Aiden said, gesturing to a tall, broad-shouldered man with a trimmed beard and cold eyes. "He'll take T-Dog, plus Myers and Lacey from our team. You'll head to Dalton. Old military checkpoint nearby might still have something worth taking."
T-Dog gave Rick a brief glance, then looked at Kellin with subtle suspicion.
"Group Three," Aiden continued, "will be under Kiera's command." A woman with a buzzcut and a scar running from her ear to her neck stepped forward. "She'll take Rick, plus Mason and Vega. You'll move on, LaFayette. Reports of some still-standing supermarkets and a fuel depot."
Rick raised an eyebrow. He didn't like being handed orders — but for now, he stayed quiet.
"Group Four will be led by Drex." A lean man with a long coat and a rifle slung over his back gave a quick nod. "He'll be joined by Daryl, along with Wicks and Reina. You'll go to Ringgold. It's closer, more rural — but that also means less picked over."
Daryl didn't react much — just spat to the side and grunted, "Fine by me."
Aiden tucked the clipboard under his arm and faced the gathered crowd once more.
"The targets are all the same," he said firmly. "Warm clothing. Blankets. Non-perishable food — canned goods, MREs, anything that'll keep. Heaters, fuel, solar panels, if you can find 'em. Flashlights. Batteries. Tools. Medicine."
He swept his gaze across both groups.
"These runs aren't just about gathering junk. We're planning for survival. For winter. If we don't do this right, people will die. You've all don`t want to seen what happens when groups go into winter unprepared."
He paused, letting that truth hang in the air.
"And listen closely," he continued, his voice growing lower. "If you come across other survivors... do not engage right away. Observe. Watch from a distance. Don't make contact unless it's absolutely necessary."
"Some of the people out there — they've given up on morality. On humanity. They'll kill you for a can of soup, or worse. If they show hostility, you return the favor without hesitation."
There were nods across the crowd. Rick's group, however, exchanged uneasy glances. Carol frowned. Carl, standing near his father, looked down at the ground. The tone was colder than what they were used to.
Aiden's tone softened — just a little.
"But if they're not a threat… if there's a chance they're like us, trying to survive, then we'll evaluate. Carefully. No mistakes. We are not alone out there, and we can't afford to make enemies when we don't have to — but we will, if it means protecting our people."
He took one last look at the assembled groups.
"You've got the rest of the day to prep. Check your gear. Sharpen your blades. Load your weapons. We move out at first light tomorrow. Questions?"
The yard remained silent for a moment. The only sound was the distant caw of a crow somewhere beyond the fences.
Rick finally stepped forward a bit. "You're asking a lot of people who haven't been here more than a couple of days."
Aiden met his gaze. "I'm asking what needs to be done."
Another long pause. Then Rick gave a slow nod. "Then we'll do it."
Aiden nodded in return, then dismissed them with a wave of his hand.
As the crowd slowly broke into smaller conversations, tension simmered under the surface. The lines between the old group and the new group were still visible. Trust hadn't been earned — not yet.
But tomorrow, that would change.
One way or another.
Later That Day… Final Preparations
The sun had risen high over the prison, casting long shadows through the open yard as the scent of dust, diesel, and sweat filled the air. Around the lot near the old garage, four armored trucks stood parked — matte-black, reinforced with metal plating welded crudely but effectively around their frames. They looked like beasts, scarred but ready to charge through the wasteland.
Each truck had been fitted with spare gear — ropes, shovels, empty jerry cans strapped to their sides to scavenge fuel from abandoned vehicles, and crates packed with arrows wrapped in cloth. There were a few guns in each vehicle, but ammo was scarce, so melee weapons and bows had become the staple for survival. Quiet. Efficient. Reusable.
All around the trucks, people moved with purpose. Fighters from Aiden's group worked alongside Rick's people — packing, checking gear, loading supplies. The atmosphere buzzed with nervous energy.
Not far from the commotion, Aiden stood near the front of the prison gates, speaking in low tones with Mara, a sharp-eyed woman with auburn hair tied back, a tactical vest strapped tight around her lean frame. She wasn't loud, but when she gave orders, people moved.
She was one of the few people Aiden trusted implicitly.
"You're in charge until we return," Aiden said, handing her a worn, hand-written list folded several times over. "This is everything I want done while we're out."
Mara unfolded it, scanning the long series of instructions, and gave a dry chuckle. "You planning on being gone a month?"
"Just being thorough," he replied, half a smirk curling at the corner of his mouth.
The list was long — Aiden had broken every task down step by step:
Reinforce the razor wire fencing around the yard by layering thick wooden panels in front of it.
Start stockpiling chopped wood for cooking and warmth.
Dig and fortify the outer perimeter trenches.
Begin tilling the soil on the south field to test it for planting come spring.
Check and repair the rainwater collectors and rooftop catch systems.
Rotate the watch tower schedule and increase guard patrols on the east side — the side less protected by natural barriers.
"If something feels off," Aiden said, voice lower now, "you tighten security. Don't wait. Don't hesitate. We don't know how long we'll be gone. Could be three days, could be a week."
Mara gave a curt nod. "I'll hold it down."
"I know you will," Aiden said, then rested a hand briefly on her shoulder before turning and walking back toward the yard.
Departure – The Journey Begins
With preparations finally complete, the armored trucks rumbled to life, their engines grumbling like sleeping giants waking up from hibernation. The noise echoed off the prison walls, loud and final — a sound that signaled departure, uncertainty… and necessity.
Aiden climbed into the lead truck — Group One's vehicle — slamming the heavy door shut. Glenn took the passenger seat, while Rourke and Silva loaded in the back, crossbows resting across their laps, eyes already scanning the landscape as if they expected trouble just outside the gates.
Behind them, the other trucks roared in turn — one by one, Groups Two through Four took their places in the convoy.
At the prison gates, the remaining members of Aiden's and Rick's people stood in a silent row. Some waved. Others simply watched.
Children peeked out from behind legs and fence rails. Little Sophia was in Carol's arms, her tiny hand raised in a clumsy wave. Carl stood beside her, hand resting on his holstered pistol, trying not to look worried.
Mara nodded once at Aiden as he passed through the gates — a silent promise exchanged between leaders.
And then the convoy rolled out.
Tires crunched over the gravel, then onto cracked, overgrown asphalt. The trucks snaked out from the prison and disappeared onto the open road, dust kicking up behind them in long brown trails.
The last to disappear was the rear truck, carrying Daryl and Drex. Then, the road was empty again, and the world felt just a little quieter.
On the Road — Hours Later
The sun had begun to drift westward, casting an orange hue across the landscape as the trucks pushed deeper into the wasteland. They had traveled for hours, off and on, stopping, scouting, restarting.
The group had split up an hour after they left the prison. Each team branched off toward their respective destinations. Aiden's truck — Group One — turned north-northeast, heading toward Cleveland.
Their path wasn't easy. The roads were littered with the decaying remains of a world long gone.
Abandoned vehicles, some rusted over and stripped bare, others looking almost untouched, lined both shoulders of the highway. Civilian sedans. Pickup trucks. Military jeeps. Some with smashed windows. Others with long-dried blood smeared across the seats. The kind of details you stop reacting to after a few years in the apocalypse.
Every few miles, Aiden ordered a stop.
He, Glenn, Rourke, and Silva moved like clockwork: weapons drawn, eyes scanning.
They checked cars with trunks still shut or backseats covered with blankets — anything that might hide supplies. Some yielded nothing. Others gave them canned goods, batteries, boxes of ammo, or useful tools. One abandoned National Guard truck held two jerry cans of old but usable gasoline. Another had spare boots and thermal blankets in the back.
At a rundown motel on the side of a cracked highway, they swept through room by room. Half the doors were kicked in. One still had a walker tangled in bedsheets, bones poking through rotting skin. Aiden put it down without a word.
They found a first aid kit, a propane camping stove, and a few sealed food rations. Glenn spotted a working flashlight under a mattress — still charged.
At a gas station, long since picked clean by survivors, they pried open the rusted back room. Rourke found a box of expired protein bars and an old hunting bow that, surprisingly, still had tension.
But for every stop, every success, there were close calls.
A collapsed overpass forced a twenty-minute detour. A cluster of walkers spotted in the trees meant doubling back to avoid a fight they didn't need. One car had a corpse in the front seat with a tripwire tied to the door — a trap left by someone else… someone smart.
The hours dragged on. The fuel meter ticked lower. The shadows grew longer.
But Aiden's eyes remained focused on the road ahead.
"We keep moving," he said, glancing at the crude map on the dashboard. "We hit the outer edge of Cleveland by nightfall. If we don't see anything promising, we find high ground and make camp just outside the city."
Glenn looked over. "And if we do see something?"
Aiden's gaze didn't waver. "Then we go quiet… and we go in."
By the time Aiden's group reached the outskirts of Cleveland, the daylight had already begun to die. The sun sank slowly behind a distant ridge of skeletal buildings, casting the remains of the city in long, brooding shadows. The orange-pink glow that washed over the ruined skyline did little to soften the grim mood — if anything, it made the landscape look even more like a battlefield frozen in time.
Cracked pavement stretched before them, filled with overturned cars, faded road signs, and dry bloodstains long baked into the asphalt. Streetlights leaned at odd angles. Billboards towered overhead like forgotten relics, their cheerful messages for theme parks and fast food chains now ghostly reminders of a world that didn't exist anymore.
In the distance, Cleveland loomed. Large. Dead. Watching.
Aiden sat in the front seat of the armored truck, leaning forward slightly, his gloved hand gripping the steering wheel even as the engine idled. His eyes were sharp, calculating.
"There," he finally said, nodding at an old two-story structure just off the road.
The building sat behind a low, crumbling wall and a parking lot that was slowly being reclaimed by nature. Ivy crawled up the sides of the faded brick, and a rusting neon sign clung to the roof. A few dim letters still hung crookedly, flickering with the last of their juice: "EZ ST— INN".
It was rundown, half-covered in shadow, but still standing. Still usable.
"That's our shelter for the night," Aiden said, cutting the engine. "Everyone out."
Approach and Execution
The four of them exited the vehicle quietly. Glenn adjusted the strap on his crossbody bag, his grip tight around the crowbar at his hip. His breath clouded faintly in the cooling evening air. Rourke loaded a fresh bolt into his crossbow, while Silva readied a curved blade with a steady calm that came only from years of surviving.
"Same method as usual," Aiden said quietly. "Glenn, you draw 'em out with noise. Rourke and Silva, you sweep the exterior. I'll cover rear and flank."
Glenn blinked. "Wait — me? Noise duty?"
"You need the experience," Aiden said without emotion. "This'll be simple. Just draw 'em out. The others will handle the kill."
Glenn hesitated, then gave a reluctant nod. "Alright. Let's do it."
He stepped toward the motel's lot, bent down, and grabbed a discarded hubcap from a rusted car. He exhaled once, bracing himself — then banged the metal loudly against a nearby street pole, the clang echoing like a bell in the stillness of dusk.
Almost instantly, groans answered.
Figures began to stir in the shadows — silhouettes rising in the parking lot, crawling out from the half-open lobby doors. The sounds were low and guttural: the death-rattle moans of the walkers. Two staggered from behind a burned-out truck. A third limped from the stairwell near the back of the motel.
Glenn stepped back, his heart pounding, trying not to show fear.
The trap was already closing.
Silva and Rourke emerged from the flanks — fast, silent, efficient. Silva drove her blade clean through the temple of one walker without breaking stride. Rourke's bolt thunked into another's skull, dropping it instantly. They moved together with a deadly rhythm.
But Glenn wasn't so lucky.
One walker lunged at him, jaws snapping, forcing him to swing wildly with his crowbar. His first blow landed on its shoulder, staggering it. The second barely clipped its head. He stumbled back, slipping on gravel.
Aiden appeared behind the walker like a shadow, grabbing it by the collar and yanking it backward before driving his knife up under the jaw, burying it deep into the brain.
The walker crumpled like a puppet with its strings cut.
Glenn was breathing hard, embarrassed, but grateful.
Aiden just looked at him. "Quicker next time. No hesitation."
Glenn swallowed and nodded. "Got it."
Securing the Structure
With the outside cleared, they began the methodical process of securing the motel. The place was silent now, but not safe.
They moved through the lower level first, each door kicked open or pried free. Most of the rooms had been ransacked long ago. Mattresses lay flipped or torn, drawers yanked open. Trash, bones, and mold greeted them in every corner.
But some doors were closed. Too quiet.
They found two more walkers inside — one sitting in a moldy bathtub, another slumped against a closet door like a discarded doll. Aiden took no chances. Each corpse was checked and, if necessary, dispatched with swift brutality. A knife to the head. A boot to the skull. No ceremony. No emotion.
"Never assume they're dead," Aiden reminded them. "Make sure."
Upstairs was worse. The second floor had signs of a struggle — broken glass, dark streaks on the walls, shell casings on the floor. A walker with half a head shuffled out from the elevator lobby. Rourke put it down with a second bolt before it took two steps.
Room by room, they swept until the entire structure was finally quiet.
Not just quiet — dead.
Salvage and Setup
They regrouped on the upper floor to assess what they had.
The supply check yielded small wins. A hidden pack of canned food in one drawer. A six-pack of bottled water behind a rotted nightstand. One first aid kit in a wall cabinet. Rourke found a folding solar charger in the office that could still hold a charge. Glenn even recovered a set of clean towels and a lantern with half a tank of fuel.
The best find was a propane stove buried under a bed, still usable.
Silva grunted approval. "Better than sleeping in the truck."
They chose two adjacent rooms for the night. Room 207 for sleeping, Room 208 for gear. Windows were already half-barricaded — they reinforced them with dressers, chairs, and motel headboards. The door was jammed with a metal bar from a coat rack. Everything they could secure, they did.
Before the light fully vanished, Aiden stood at the door, giving last instructions.
"We rotate every two hours. First watch, Rourke. Then Silva. Then me. Glenn, you take the last shift before dawn."
No one argued.
Through the Night
As the sky turned dark blue, then black, the silence deepened. Only the distant moan of a lone walker — somewhere in the far city — reminded them of the world beyond the motel walls.
Rourke sat by the door, crossbow resting across his lap, his eyes never blinking. He stared into the dim hallway like a soldier back on the battlefield.
The others slept in shifts. Glenn, curled in the corner with his crowbar still in hand, tossed and turned in his blanket. Silva, always practical, was asleep within minutes. Aiden remained half-awake, head against the wall, eyes slightly open.
During his shift, he sat beside the window, looking out through the boarded slats. The city skyline shimmered in the distance, lit only by moonlight and silence.
He didn't relax. He didn't dream.
He just watched.
Because tomorrow… the real work would begin.