The grey skies of Cleveland loomed heavy overhead as Aiden stood by the armored truck, the soft clink of metal echoing while he double-checked the last bungee cords securing the final crate. Behind him, the others moved quickly and quietly, storing what remained of their salvaged gear: ammo boxes, jerry cans filled with fuel, food bags, and salvaged military supplies. Everything they had worked so hard to gather was now packed with precision into the back of the vehicle.
Glenn climbed up into the truck cab and leaned out the window. "Fuel gauge says we're just over three-quarters with the extra jerries. That'll get us to the rendezvous point and back to the prison—barely."
Aiden gave a nod, eyes sweeping the street one last time. "Then we move."
The motel was silent now, stripped clean and left fortified for a possible future return. The group had painted a single white mark on the door—a universal signal in their code: Safe but looted. Not hostile. Don't linger.
With a deep breath, Aiden climbed into the passenger seat. Silva rode in the back with their scavenged gear, armed and alert. The last man, Dax, took the rear window slot with a scoped rifle, acting as lookout. They didn't know what they'd find on the road, but they were ready.
The engine rumbled to life. Not too loud, not too quiet. Aiden had worked on the muffler days ago to keep the truck from roaring through the city like a dinner bell. They rolled out slowly, wheels crunching over broken glass, dead leaves, and bones.
On the Road Again
As they left the Cleveland city limits, Aiden glanced back through the side mirror, watching the skyline slowly fade behind them—skyscrapers like tombstones against the grey dawn. The city had been quiet. Too quiet. And though they were bringing back a haul unlike anything they'd seen since the start of the outbreak, something still itched at the back of his neck.
"Still nothing on the radio," Glenn muttered, tuning through static. "Not even military broadcasts anymore."
"No one's left to broadcast," Aiden replied quietly. "If there are survivors, they're deep underground… or far from the cities."
The highway ahead stretched on, broken and cracked in places, overgrown with grass and vines. Every so often, they'd see abandoned cars or rusted-out military convoys—bullet holes riddling the sides, busted doors hanging open, and dried blood pooled around long-dead walkers that hadn't moved in months.
They passed a flipped bus near an exit ramp, the charred skeletons inside still locked in their seats by melted seatbelts. Silva whispered, "This world's just a graveyard now."
But even graveyards can be dangerous.
The Highway Threat
About 30 miles south of Cleveland, the highway narrowed due to a partial collapse. Aiden motioned to slow down. They pulled the truck to a stop behind a line of wrecked cars. Dax climbed out to scout ahead. Moments later, he called back over the walkie.
"We've got a blockage—six or seven cars jammed across the lanes. Could be natural… could be intentional."
Aiden's face tightened. "Set up a perimeter. Glenn, stay with the truck. If anything moves, hit the horn."
The group moved slowly, rifles up, stepping between burned-out SUVs and shattered windshields. One car still had its stereo playing faint static, powered by a dying solar charger someone had rigged onto the roof. There were no bodies this time. No blood.
That was what made Aiden nervous.
They cleared the cars cautiously, finding old backpacks, camping gear, even a child's toy—untouched. It wasn't just a natural pile-up. Someone had moved these vehicles here deliberately, making a choke point.
But why?
As they finished clearing a single-lane path for the truck to squeeze through, Dax spoke quietly. "I don't like this. Feels like bait."
Aiden scanned the treeline. "Then let's not linger."
They remounted quickly. As the truck crawled past the wrecks, Glenn kept his hand hovering near the horn. But nothing moved. No shots. No movement. Just wind and birds.
But the tension never left Aiden's shoulders.
A Break Before Darkness
By late afternoon, they had covered more than 100 miles. They found an old rest stop just off the highway—an abandoned travel center with a few bathrooms, vending machines looted long ago, and a rooftop vantage point.
Aiden decided it was time to rest for the night.
They fortified the area with scrap metal and parked the truck in between two semi-trailers to hide it from plain view. Inside the rest stop, they lit a small fire barrel and took turns heating up the MREs they had taken from the bunker.
Aiden took the first watch while the others rested. He sat on the rooftop, rifle resting on his lap, staring at the darkening horizon. Every so often, he looked back at the others through the cracked window below.
When Glenn came up to take his shift, he sat beside Aiden quietly for a while. Then he said, "You think the others made it back okay?"
Aiden didn't answer right away. "If they kept their heads down, they're fine. They've got our best fighters. Mara's in charge back at the prison. We planned for every step of this. But... we still don't know what's out there."
Glenn rubbed his arms for warmth. "Still thinking about the bunker, aren't you?"
Aiden gave a soft nod. "That wasn't just a failure. That was a warning. We keep thinking we're ahead of this thing. That we're adapting. But the truth is... we're surviving by inches."
He looked out again, and the silence between them grew heavy.
"Next town's Dalton," Aiden said finally. "We'll camp there before swinging south to meet up with Group 2."
Glenn looked down the highway, where the fading road vanished into shadows. "Let's hope they had better luck than we did."
The sun had nearly dipped below the horizon when Aiden gave the order to start setting up camp. The rest stop was quiet—too quiet, but it offered the cover they needed. Dax was stacking debris to create a makeshift barricade. Glenn was unloading sleeping bags, and Silva was checking ammo when Aiden froze mid-step.
His ears caught something—an engine. No, two.
"Everyone, quiet!" he barked, eyes narrowing toward the distant road.
From the far end of the highway, a pair of headlights crested the hill. Aiden grabbed his binoculars from the truck dashboard and raised them. The lenses revealed two sedans, roaring down the road at full speed. Dust trailed behind them. Their erratic weaving wasn't from bad roads—it was intentional. A pincer move.
"They're coming fast. One in front, one behind. Ambush pattern," Aiden growled. "Weapons up! Silva—cover the truck. Glenn—right side!"
The group scrambled into position, ducking behind concrete parking dividers and overturned vending machines. Aiden knelt behind a rusted-out payphone stand, rifle raised.
"Warning shots. Don't wait," he snapped.
Dax and Aiden fired three quick warning rounds—sharp cracks that echoed across the highway. But the cars didn't slow down. Instead, they slammed on their brakes at the last second, tires screeching, skidding to a stop sideways, cutting off escape in both directions.
From each car, the doors flung open. Five figures leapt out, shouting over each other. Their gear was ragged—improvised armor made of scrap leather and metal. One carried an AR-15. Another waved a pistol wildly. The rest had blades and clubs.
And then—the first shot rang out.
Aiden didn't hesitate. The moment he saw the glint of the rifle muzzle on the left sedan, he returned fire, a controlled burst from his own rifle slamming into the front grill of the enemy vehicle, sending sparks flying.
"Cover!" he yelled as bullets began tearing through the air.
Glenn ducked low and crawled to a side position, firing his handgun from the shadows of a supply crate. His shots went wide—nerves showing—but at least he was laying cover. Silva crouched by the truck's back wheel, bracing her rifle on the fender and popping shots with icy focus. One of the attackers took a round to the shoulder and stumbled back, clutching the wound.
Dax grunted as a round hit the divider he was behind, spraying him with bits of concrete. "They're not just raiders—they know what they're doing!"
Aiden kept moving, quick and precise, staying low and flanking. He fired two rounds at the shooter with the AR, one shot catching the man in the chest—he dropped hard, blood spraying onto the pavement. The others hesitated for a second.
"Push 'em!" Aiden shouted. "Flank and suppress!"
Silva dropped another with a clean headshot, just as he was trying to climb onto the hood of the second sedan. Glenn took a hit to his arm but still managed to shoot and wound a club-wielder charging their barricade.
The pistol-wielding enemy was screaming now, more from fear than rage, retreating behind the car door, firing blindly into the night. Dax popped up and dropped him with two clean shots—one to the leg, then one to the head.
The last attacker bolted.
"Stop him!" Aiden ordered, running after him.
The man darted between vehicles, trying to make it to the trees on the opposite side of the highway. Aiden chased him down, boots slamming against the cracked pavement. At the last second, the raider turned to shoot—but Aiden was faster. One clean shot, and the man spun and fell, crashing into the grass, blood seeping into the dirt.
Aftermath: Cold Silence
The firefight was over. The smell of burnt gunpowder and hot engines filled the air. Aiden stood there for a long moment, gun still raised, eyes on the downed man to make sure he didn't twitch.
Then, silence.
"Status!" he called out, spinning around.
"Glenn's hit—but it's a graze!" Silva yelled, crouched beside him. "He's okay. Bleeding, but nothing deep."
"I'm good!" Dax added. "Ammo's low. Three mags left."
Aiden exhaled. "Get Glenn patched. Silva—loot the cars. Dax, secure the perimeter. No one else shows up on our ass tonight."
They moved like professionals now, no longer rattled. Adrenaline had taken over.
The attackers were well-armed but not trained. Probably a rogue gang—or worse, scouts for something bigger. Aiden wasn't sure what concerned him more: that they attacked so openly, or that they weren't surprised to find someone here.
Searching the Bodies
The five raiders had basic supplies—canned food, mismatched ammo, water bottles, and some military-issue items. Their vehicles had maps, marked with crude red Xs—outposts, stores, possibly other survivor locations. One map had a prison marked with a red question mark.
Aiden frowned at it. "They were tracking us. Or someone like us."
Inside the trunk of one of the sedans, they found a half-burned bag with ID cards, wedding rings, and other personal effects. Silva's jaw tightened. "Looted. From civilians."
"No one innocent survives long in this world," Aiden said bitterly.
Into the Night
They burned the bodies after scavenging what was usable. It was risky, but Aiden didn't want anyone else finding them and recognizing the faces. Smoke rose into the night sky, a grim warning to any other would-be attackers.
Around the fire drum, Glenn nursed his bandaged arm while the rest sat in tense silence. Aiden finally spoke.
"Tomorrow we leave early. No more extended stops. These roads aren't empty. And if that bunker back in Cleveland was a warning… this was a message."
Glenn nodded, face pale. "From who?"
"That," Aiden said grimly, "is what we need to find out. And fast."
The sun had nearly dipped below the horizon when Aiden gave the order to start setting up camp. The rest stop was quiet—too quiet, but it offered the cover they needed. Dax was stacking debris to create a makeshift barricade. Glenn was unloading sleeping bags, and Silva was checking ammo when Aiden froze mid-step.
His ears caught something—an engine. No, two.
"Everyone, quiet!" he barked, eyes narrowing toward the distant road.
From the far end of the highway, a pair of headlights crested the hill. Aiden grabbed his binoculars from the truck dashboard and raised them. The lenses revealed two sedans, roaring down the road at full speed. Dust trailed behind them. Their erratic weaving wasn't from bad roads—it was intentional. A pincer move.
"They're coming fast. One in front, one behind. Ambush pattern," Aiden growled. "Weapons up! Silva—cover the truck. Glenn—right side!"
The group scrambled into position, ducking behind concrete parking dividers and overturned vending machines. Aiden knelt behind a rusted-out payphone stand, rifle raised.
"Warning shots. Don't wait," he snapped.
Dax and Aiden fired three quick warning rounds—sharp cracks that echoed across the highway. But the cars didn't slow down. Instead, they slammed on their brakes at the last second, tires screeching, skidding to a stop sideways, cutting off escape in both directions.
From each car, the doors flung open. Five figures leapt out, shouting over each other. Their gear was ragged—improvised armor made of scrap leather and metal. One carried an AR-15. Another waved a pistol wildly. The rest had blades and clubs.
And then—the first shot rang out.
Aiden didn't hesitate. The moment he saw the glint of the rifle muzzle on the left sedan, he returned fire, a controlled burst from his own rifle slamming into the front grill of the enemy vehicle, sending sparks flying.
"Cover!" he yelled as bullets began tearing through the air.
Glenn ducked low and crawled to a side position, firing his handgun from the shadows of a supply crate. His shots went wide—nerves showing—but at least he was laying cover. Silva crouched by the truck's back wheel, bracing her rifle on the fender and popping shots with icy focus. One of the attackers took a round to the shoulder and stumbled back, clutching the wound.
Dax grunted as a round hit the divider he was behind, spraying him with bits of concrete. "They're not just raiders—they know what they're doing!"
Aiden kept moving, quick and precise, staying low and flanking. He fired two rounds at the shooter with the AR, one shot catching the man in the chest—he dropped hard, blood spraying onto the pavement. The others hesitated for a second.
"Push 'em!" Aiden shouted. "Flank and suppress!"
Silva dropped another with a clean headshot, just as he was trying to climb onto the hood of the second sedan. Glenn took a hit to his arm but still managed to shoot and wound a club-wielder charging their barricade.
The pistol-wielding enemy was screaming now, more from fear than rage, retreating behind the car door, firing blindly into the night. Dax popped up and dropped him with two clean shots—one to the leg, then one to the head.
The last attacker bolted.
"Stop him!" Aiden ordered, running after him.
The man darted between vehicles, trying to make it to the trees on the opposite side of the highway. Aiden chased him down, boots slamming against the cracked pavement. At the last second, the raider turned to shoot—but Aiden was faster. One clean shot, and the man spun and fell, crashing into the grass, blood seeping into the dirt.
Aftermath: Cold Silence
The firefight was over. The smell of burnt gunpowder and hot engines filled the air. Aiden stood there for a long moment, gun still raised, eyes on the downed man to make sure he didn't twitch.
Then, silence.
"Status!" he called out, spinning around.
"Glenn's hit—but it's a graze!" Silva yelled, crouched beside him. "He's okay. Bleeding, but nothing deep."
"I'm good!" Dax added. "Ammo's low. Three mags left."
Aiden exhaled. "Get Glenn patched. Silva—loot the cars. Dax, secure the perimeter. No one else shows up on our ass tonight."
They moved like professionals now, no longer rattled. Adrenaline had taken over.
The attackers were well-armed but not trained. Probably a rogue gang—or worse, scouts for something bigger. Aiden wasn't sure what concerned him more: that they attacked so openly, or that they weren't surprised to find someone here.
Searching the Bodies
The five raiders had basic supplies—canned food, mismatched ammo, water bottles, and some military-issue items. Their vehicles had maps, marked with crude red Xs—outposts, stores, possibly other survivor locations. One map had a prison marked with a red question mark.
Aiden frowned at it. "They were tracking us. Or someone like us."
Inside the trunk of one of the sedans, they found a half-burned bag with ID cards, wedding rings, and other personal effects. Silva's jaw tightened. "Looted. From civilians."
"No one innocent survives long in this world," Aiden said bitterly.
Into the Night
They burned the bodies after scavenging what was usable. It was risky, but Aiden didn't want anyone else finding them and recognizing the faces. Smoke rose into the night sky, a grim warning to any other would-be attackers.
Around the fire drum, Glenn nursed his bandaged arm while the rest sat in tense silence. Aiden finally spoke.
"Tomorrow we leave early. No more extended stops. These roads aren't empty. And if that bunker back in Cleveland was a warning… this was a message."
Glenn nodded, face pale. "From who?"
"That," Aiden said grimly, "is what we need to find out. And fast."
Later that night, long after the last flames of the burned bodies had died down and silence reclaimed the rest stop, Aiden sat alone by the dwindling campfire. The others were tending wounds, checking gear, and trying to sleep through the unease. His hands were blackened from smoke and gunpowder, his eyes weary, but alert.
He turned something over in his hands—an old, battered notebook. He had taken it off the man who tried to escape into the trees—the last of the attackers. It had been tucked inside a torn jacket pocket, wrapped in plastic. The cover was cracked leather, the edges worn soft from use. It wasn't military-issue or tactical. It was personal.
Aiden opened it.
The first few pages were what he expected: rough sketches, messy handwriting, crude maps with arrows and Xs, lists of names—some crossed out—possibly kills or squadmates. But then the tone changed.
He flipped to a page titled, Cleveland's Fall.
"We should have stayed away from the bunkers. We didn't understand how it worked—not really. We just thought if someone dies, you put a bullet in the head. Simple. But we got cocky."
"There were twenty-six of us when we reached Cleveland. Twenty-six. We thought the city was empty—ripe for the taking. Military checkpoints? Just obstacles. So we hit them. Took what we wanted. Those blue boys with their perfect uniforms and orders… They didn't know what to do once we hit them from both sides. We overwhelmed the first two outposts, found gear, ammo, even rations. Figured the rest would be just as easy."
"Then we found the bunker."
"That's where everything went to hell."
Aiden's fingers tightened slightly as he read, the fire crackling beside him, casting dancing shadows on the pages.
"We breached it clean. No resistance. Just bodies. A lot of bodies. All over the floors. Like they'd gassed themselves or drank poison. Everyone thought it was perfect. Supplies, shelter, equipment. But something was off. I could feel it."
"That night, Joey said he heard coughing from down the hall. We laughed it off. No one checked. We were tired. Stupid."
"Turns out, it wasn't someone coughing. It was... them. The 'dead.' We didn't burn the bodies. We didn't shoot them in the head. We just... left them there. We thought they were already taken care of. But they weren't. We were wrong."
"First, it was Mark. Bit through the throat by a body we knew was cold. Then Shane. Then Ivy. One by one, they came back. But not the way we knew. They looked dead. Still dead. But they moved. No groaning. Just... movement. Like a twitch. Then hunger."
Aiden paused, eyes narrowing. He looked up briefly at the dark horizon, then turned back to the next page.
"We started running. Screaming. Trapped ourselves in a hallway with no exits. Lost ten of us in the span of an hour. We learned—too late—that it's not just the bite. It's already in us. All it takes is death. And if you don't destroy the brain…"
"We thought we were tough. Survivors. But that night we became prey."
The next few entries became fragmented—written in shaking hands, with smudged ink and torn corners.
"We made it out. Only six of us. Cleveland was a graveyard."
"No, worse than that. It was a trap. A lie. It looks empty, so you let your guard down. It looks untouched because the only ones who go in don't come out."
"We stayed. We thought we could pick off whoever came next. Scavenge. Survive. But it just kept getting harder. We weren't hunters anymore. We were rats in the ruins. The city belonged to the dead now. We were just squatters."
"Now there are just five of us. And we're dying too."
"We don't even bury the bodies right. Maybe that's why they come back. We leave them half-dead. Walk right past them. Always too busy to double-check. That's how we lose. Every time."
"If someone's reading this, we're probably gone. Maybe you killed us. Maybe you're next. Just... don't trust silence. Don't trust empty cities. And always destroy the brain."
Aiden closed the notebook slowly. He stared into the fire again, its embers glowing low like watchful eyes in the night.
He stood up and walked over to the others.
Silva looked up from cleaning her rifle. "You look like you read something you wish you hadn't."
"I did," Aiden replied.
He tossed the notebook down beside the fire for the others to read. "They weren't just bandits. They were scavengers who survived the fall of Cleveland. They thought they were hunters… but the city killed them, just slower than the others."
Glenn frowned, the wound on his arm now bandaged. "So that's why there are no survivors in Cleveland. No boarded houses. No fortified shops. It's not that no one lived there… It's that no one survived it."
"Exactly," Aiden said grimly. "And these five idiots kept anyone else from escaping once they figured it out. Ambushing groups coming in or out."
Silva's eyes narrowed. "Why? What's the point?"
"Fear," Aiden said. "And desperation. They couldn't leave… so no one else could either."
He looked out into the dark.
"They weren't the threat anymore. The city was."
The team sat in silence, absorbing the grim reality.
Cleveland wasn't a battleground. It wasn't a city to be taken or saved.
It was a tomb.