The next morning rolled in under a heavy gray sky, thick with clouds that promised either rain or something worse. The motel had become their temporary fortress, but the longer they stayed, the more they felt the weight of the city pressing in. Their bodies ached from the constant hauling, fighting, and tension, but there was no room for rest. Winter was coming, and every extra can of food or scrap of gear was another day they could survive.
Aiden was up first, as usual, walking the perimeter with sharp eyes and a tighter posture than the day before. Glenn and Silva joined him soon after, rubbing sore shoulders and moving stiffly. Rourke would stay behind again, guarding the motel and keeping the radio line open in case of trouble. The fire barrel from the night before was cold now, smoke a memory.
They loaded up their packs with empty bags, slung weapons across their backs, and left again — this time heading past the military checkpoint they had scouted earlier, toward the outer fringe of the city. According to an old city map they had found in the SWAT van, there were commercial zones and suburban clusters out here. Promising targets. Less choked with ruins. Fewer tall buildings meant fewer places for walkers to fall from or hide in.
But within an hour, the mood shifted.
As they moved deeper into the neighborhood, the air began to feel off. The streets were littered with decayed, long-dead bodies—far more than they had seen in other parts of the city. Dozens, then hundreds. Slumped against fences, sprawled in intersections, or collapsed mid-step. The further they walked, the more it looked like people had simply fallen where they stood.
"What the hell..." Glenn whispered, nudging a collapsed man in camouflage. The body was brittle, more bone than flesh. Bullet holes peppered the nearby brick wall. Spent casings crunched beneath their boots.
Aiden raised a fist—halt.
They were standing at the edge of what had once been a military forward operating camp, now nothing more than a field of corpses and silence. The kind of place built in a hurry — sandbags stacked, towers still standing but stripped, broken antenna wires dangling in the breeze.
There had been a massacre here. That much was obvious.
Cots still stood inside some of the collapsed tents, stained and abandoned. A radio tower lay snapped in half, crushed beneath a tent truck. Bullet holes were everywhere — trucks, tents, supply crates, even the makeshift latrines. There were no walker bodies here. Only human.
"This wasn't a fight with the dead," Silva said quietly, scanning the area with her rifle drawn. "This was... something else. Like they turned on each other."
"Or panicked," Glenn added. "Could've been infected from the inside."
Aiden didn't reply. He moved forward, slow and methodical, picking through the carnage. His eyes didn't rest long on the corpses — they were too far gone, dried out and cracked under months of sun and cold. But what they wore — what they carried — that was still useful.
What They Looted
They moved from body to body, tent to tent, salvaging what they could with grim efficiency:
From Soldiers & Police Corpses
Tactical belts and pouches, some still carrying extra mags.
4 working sidearms (2 Glocks, 2 Berettas), all loaded.
3 extra 5.56 NATO magazines.
A single, nearly intact M4 carbine — the barrel scorched, but usable.
Utility knives, multitools, canteens.
Kevlar vests — 2 are still structurally sound.
Police radio gear — several headsets and short-range communicators.
From Military Crates
Emergency rations (12 full packs, plus dried fruit and crackers).
Powdered drink mix (electrolytes, long shelf life).
Field medical kits — most picked clean, but they found bandages, a suture kit, and 2 morphine injectors.
Chemical light sticks, duct tape rolls, hand warmers.
A crate of water purification tablets.
A case of batteries, most still usable.
One sniper scope, unmounted.
A damaged but restorable drone — possibly used for scouting.
As they reached the center of the camp, Aiden found a command tent, partially collapsed, its side blown inward by what looked like an explosion. A burned map lay across a table, mostly unreadable, but beneath it was a hardbound logbook, the cover scorched and partially soaked.
He flipped through the pages carefully. Most were ruined. But a few pages at the back were legible—quick, frantic handwriting:
"...contact lost with west perimeter…"
"...reported coughing in bunker…"
"...orders unclear. Shots fired. Chaos in tent C..."
"...not walkers. They look normal. But they're not…"
"...if anyone finds this, don't trust anyone who survived this city. We sealed ourselves in. But it didn't matter."
Aiden tucked the log into his pack and didn't say a word.
They spent hours moving through the site, each new corner of the ruined camp revealing something worse — bloodstained notes, snapped dog tags, drawings from children that had once been in the quarantine zone. They found a chapel tent burned to the ground, the steel frame twisted like melted wire. On the far side of the camp, they found a shallow mass grave, partially collapsed, with limbs sticking out from the dirt.
No one spoke for a long time.
Finally, Aiden turned toward the others. "We take what we need and we move. We're not staying here tonight."
Glenn, pale and shaken, nodded. "Back to the motel?"
"Yeah," Aiden said. "This place feels wrong."
They gathered their final haul, loaded what they could carry, and began the slow, heavy walk back toward the motel, every sound around them now feeling sharper, louder, closer.
The city might have been quiet, but it was not empty. Not anymore.
Aiden and his group stood in front of the bunker doors, the steel surface cold and pitted with age. Vines had crept over it, and the entrance had long been forgotten by nature. The logbook they'd found at the military checkpoint had mentioned this place—a fallback bunker, likely an emergency safehouse when the outbreak swept through. But the final pages had been strange: coughing, then silence… then nothing at all.
The silence here felt heavy, unnatural. Even the wind didn't whistle through this part of the city. The road nearby was lined with burnt-out cars and long-dead bodies. And yet, this place remained sealed.
Aiden looked over his shoulder at Glenn and Silva.
"We go in slowly. Weapons ready. If it moves, we end it. If it doesn't, we strip it."
He grasped the massive door handle and pulled. It groaned like an animal in pain, echoing down into the darkness beyond. The smell hit them instantly—rot, dry blood, mildew, and something metallic. Death.
Descending Into the Bunker
They moved cautiously down the stairwell, their flashlights sweeping over moldy walls and dried blood trails. Along the way, they passed military graffiti hastily scrawled on the concrete:
"Sealed at 14:03. Pray it holds."
"They changed without a bite. Don't breathe it."
"Day 7. No response from HQ. We're on our own."
At the first landing, they found the bodies stacked against the walls, some in tactical gear, others in civilian clothes. Aiden knelt beside a uniformed soldier. The man had shot himself in the head. His rifle lay across his lap, its barrel rusted over.
Each body had the same thing in common: their skulls were destroyed.
No signs of external bites or claw wounds. Most had medical bands on their wrists. One even wore an oxygen mask.
"Something happened here," Glenn muttered. "They turned without contact."
"Probably a respiratory strain," Aiden said, glancing at the black mold and broken ventilation ducts. "Maybe airborne in confined spaces. Explains the masks and sealed doors."
Scavenging the Dead Zone
They explored room by room—clearing each space carefully, finding the remains of a failed last stand.
In the medical bay, they discovered:
Sterile bandages, burn kits, trauma gear
A locked cabinet with IV fluids and antibiotics
A partially preserved surgery kit in a steel case
A single, unopened biohazard case labeled "Samples – DO NOT OPEN"
Aiden didn't even touch it. "That stays. We're not here to open Pandora's box."
In the storage bay, they found:
MREs, almost two crates worth, dust-covered but sealed
A full crate of canned goods labeled "Emergency Use Only"
Water purification tablets
Stacked fuel stabilizer cans, but no active generator
"Too much noise risk. No generator," Aiden said. "We do this all by hand."
In the communications room, the radio console was half-smashed, but some encrypted data drives were intact. Aiden took them—he didn't know what was on them, but figured someone back at the prison might be able to pull something useful. Even if it was just maps or survivor records.
They came across a sealed wing. A warning was scrawled across it in red spray paint:
"THEY WERE ALIVE WHEN WE SEALED IT. THEY ASKED US TO. DO NOT OPEN."
The door had since been blown open.
Inside, the air was colder. More bodies. Some looked like they had starved. Others had shot themselves. One lay on a cot, an old journal still clutched in his hand. Aiden opened it slowly.
"We took in a family. No bites. Just coughing. By morning, they were different. Not walkers. Not alive either. Just... off.""My daughter said they were talking, but not like people. Something was wrong in their voices.""I'm sorry to anyone who finds this. We tried. We really did."
No Fire. No Fuel. Just Silence.
When they had gathered everything useful, Aiden stood in the center of the main room one last time, his boots echoing softly on the concrete.
Glenn looked at him. "Aiden… are we burning it?"
Aiden shook his head. "No. We're not wasting fuel on silence."
He turned and walked to the exit. "This place is a grave. That's what it wanted to be. We leave it to the dead."
They resealed the bunker door with a thick metal chain and a heavy padlock taken from the camp entrance. Aiden left a fresh marker tag across the top:
"SEALED. DO NOT OPEN. CORRUPTED AIR."
It wasn't just for his group—it was for any who might come after them.
Back at the motel, the group moved silently, unpacking the crates of supplies and checking each item for damage. They added the new meds to the storage cabinet, stashed the extra ammo in the weapons locker, and updated their map with notes from the bunker.
That night, they sat around the burn barrel—no wood wasted, only scraps from ruined furniture—and ate quietly.
No one said it, but they all felt it: they were being watched by something, even if it was only the memory of that place beneath the earth.
And Cleveland? It wasn't done telling its story. Not yet.
The cold wind rolled off the city streets as Aiden stood by the motel's reinforced barricade. The early morning haze clung to the ground, grey and silent, as if Cleveland itself were holding its breath. Aiden's fingers drummed softly on the rifle stock slung across his back as he looked to Glenn and Silva, already loading their gear.
"We're going back," Aiden said simply.
Silva paused. "To the bunker? We already took the best stuff."
Aiden shook his head. "We left too much. And we didn't search the storage annex behind the inner chamber. Those crates were sealed tight. Could be food, weapons, tools—anything."
Glenn gave a tired nod, rubbing sleep from his eyes. "You sure it's worth it?"
Aiden turned to face them, voice firm. "Anything that's still in usable condition—we need it. If that place really went dark during an evacuation, then what's down there isn't junk. It's gear. Maybe even answers."
Return to the Bunker
They prepped the armored truck, reinforced the wheel wells with scrap sheet metal, and drove cautiously back through the side streets, steering around abandoned cars and keeping their eyes on the skyline. As they neared the area, silence crept back in, just like before. The same burnt-out husks, the same sense of pressure.
Aiden parked the truck facing the exit. "Engine stays off. I'm not wasting fuel if we can roll downhill to get out. Leave it in neutral. We go in light, bags only."
As they approached the chained and padlocked door, Aiden took out the key and the marker he had left behind. His fingers lingered on the words:
SEALED. DO NOT OPEN. CORRUPTED AIR.
He sighed. "Guess we're opening it again."
Inside the Bunker – Round Two
Inside, it was just as they left it. The smell. The silence. The stale death clinging to every surface. But this time, they weren't exploring—they were stripping the place clean.
They returned to the storage annex, the steel door half-welded shut. Aiden used a crowbar to break it loose, and they finally stepped inside.
The crates were stacked five high, military-stamped, some with yellow warning symbols and faded barcodes.
They cracked them open one by one:
Four crates of MREs, nearly expired but still edible
A crate of thermal blankets and sleeping bags, vacuum-packed
A crate marked "Utility Gear"—inside were multitools, hand-crank radios, spare batteries, folding axes, and paracord
Two smaller crates labeled "CBRN"—inside were gas masks, some sealed, some used, and several suits that had long since deteriorated from age
Silva raised an eyebrow. "CBRN? Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear. This place was ready for anything."
They loaded what they could into duffel bags. Aiden personally carried the intact radio systems—they could be useful for connecting with others if they ever got power set up back at the prison.
Aiden's Theory
As they stepped back out into the pale daylight, Aiden clicked the chain shut behind him again and leaned on the truck, eyes scanning the dead road ahead. Then he finally said it:
"I've been thinking," he began. "About what we saw down there. The clean headshots. No signs of bites. No blood. But all of them came back."
Silva looked up from the crate she was tying down. "You think it was the air?"
Aiden shook his head. "No. I think the virus is in everyone. Has been. Probably since the start."
Glenn stiffened. "Then how come they didn't turn until later?"
"They didn't get infected. They activated," Aiden said slowly. "Some people die. Heart failure. Starvation. Suicide. Doesn't matter how. The body dies, but the virus kicks in—if the brain's intact. That's when it takes over."
Silva frowned. "So it's not just spread by bites."
"No," Aiden said. "The bite just kills you faster. It's septic, infected. But that's not what makes you turn. You turn because you died... and your brain was still intact."
There was a silence between them.
"Then what happened down there?" Glenn asked.
Aiden looked back at the bunker's metal door. "My guess? That evacuation didn't fail because walkers broke in. It failed because people died from other causes. Some probably suffocated in their masks, others overdosed on meds, got sick, or just gave up. The soldiers had orders—headshot the ones who turned. Maybe too late. Maybe not fast enough."
Silva muttered, "And the rest sealed themselves in, hoping to starve before the virus could kick in."
"Right," Aiden said. "It wasn't airborne. It was inevitable."
Back at the Motel Outpost
They returned before sundown, just as the wind started to pick up again. Aiden called for the others as the truck rolled back into the lot. They all gathered around as he unloaded the new gear.
They took inventory together:
34 new MREs
19 cans of sealed food
2 rifles with extra parts
3 gas masks and filters
2 working radios
Assorted medical supplies
A set of hardened tactical gloves and kneepads
1 military field journal with partially redacted notes
As they sorted the goods, Aiden gathered the group and shared what he'd seen and what he believed.
"From now on," he told them, "don't assume safety means clean air or no bites. If someone dies—any death—and we don't destroy the brain, they come back. Doesn't matter how it happened. We do it out of respect. Mercy. Safety."
There were a few shaken faces, a few nods. Some looked uneasy, especially Glenn, but no one argued.
That night, the fire in the barrel burned low. They took turns on watch, eyes scanning the streets, ears tuned to every creak of the motel or distant sound in the dark.
And Aiden? He sat by the window, rifle across his lap, staring toward the skyline of Cleveland.
They hadn't seen any living survivors yet. Not one. But with this much untouched gear, these many unboarded homes… he knew someone else had to be here.
Or maybe something else.