The sun had just begun to rise, casting a faint orange glow over the endless fields and battered roads of Georgia. Aiden stirred awake inside the back of his apocalyptic truck, surrounded by steel walls, bolted-down furniture, and the faint hum of preparedness. He lay there for a moment, allowing the calm before the storm to settle in his chest. Then, as always, the mission called.
With practiced precision, Aiden sat up and swung his legs over the edge of the bed. He reached for his tactical jacket and gear, strapping each piece in place with the ease of ritual. His knife found its sheath on his belt. The M9 was holstered securely at his hip. His composite longbow was laid gently into its sling, and his quiver was topped off with fresh arrows—half standard, half custom-tipped.
After one final glance at the soft glow of the outside world through the roof vent, Aiden moved toward the rear door of the truck. He disengaged the heavy interior latches, slid back the crossbar, and opened the double doors slowly, letting in the crisp morning air. Mist clung low to the earth as if the world itself held its breath.
He stepped out onto the cracked gravel, took a deep breath, and turned toward the cab of the truck. Climbing inside, he ran a systems check on the internal monitors. Fuel: 82%. Inventory: stable. Security: green across the board.
As the engine roared to life, the ground beneath rumbled with the power of Aiden's moving fortress. He adjusted the side mirrors, pulled the reinforced steel mask over the lower half of his face, and began rolling forward—heading straight back toward Atlanta.
The plan today was clear: hit the last of the fallen safe zones.
Marked on the hand-drawn map he'd been sketching for weeks, they were scattered through the city like scars of what once was. Each location had once been a beacon of hope—military-controlled checkpoints, hastily fortified community centers, and police barricades turned into refugee camps. But one by one, they'd been swallowed whole by the walker tide.
And that made them prime treasure troves.
High-grade gear. Crates of unused ammo. Unclaimed rifles. Medical supplies that were still good if stored right. Tactical gear. Possibly encrypted radios, drone equipment, or even prototype military tech if he got lucky.
And Aiden was all about getting lucky through smart planning.
He reached the outskirts of the city around mid-morning. Smoke still hung in the sky in certain areas, proof that Atlanta was far from done burning. He parked the truck behind the ruins of a toppled diner, shielding it from view beneath a makeshift camouflage net made from torn mesh, mud, and a few fake branches.
Then he geared up properly.
Primary weapon: Composite longbow with modular arrows.Secondary: Suppressed M9 pistol.Utility gear: Grapple hook, pry bar, flashlight, scavenging tools, spare magazines.Armor: Ballistic vest under the tactical jacket, reinforced elbow/knee guards, combat boots.
His first destination was a National Guard relief station marked near an old football stadium. It had once been a supply drop point—he remembered seeing news reports about it in the early days of the outbreak. With military-grade containers and evacuation tents, Aiden expected a solid haul.
Navigating through back alleys, building ruins, and abandoned streets, he avoided every walker cluster he could, conserving stamina for when it really mattered. Occasionally he'd pick off a lone straggler with a quick, silent arrow through the skull—clean, efficient.
When he finally reached the old stadium, it was just as grim as expected. The outer walls were scorched, the inner perimeter littered with dried corpses in old fatigues and civilian clothing. Barricades had been torn apart, some from inside.
But there were signs of untouched bounty.
Dozens of military crates still sat unopened beneath a collapsed tower, their locks still functional but rusted. Aiden went to work, using his pry bar and lockpicks. One by one, the crates revealed their contents:
4 boxes of 5.56mm rounds
Two M4 carbines, slightly worn but functional
Medical-grade trauma kits
Field rations (still sealed)
A hardened laptop—dead battery, but maybe salvageable
Ballistic face shield and modular helmet
Night vision goggles (one cracked lens, but usable)
Three combat knives and a machete
He loaded it all into the system inventory, savoring the thought of what each item could mean for his survival and upcoming battles.
This was just the first of several stops.
Other locations waited:
A police station, half-burned but rumored to have an armory in the basement.
A CDC outpost, shut down weeks before the fall—Aiden hoped to find medical data or antiviral prototypes.
A civilian shelter, turned massacre site, but possibly rich with food stores and clothing.
A military convoy wreck he'd marked on the highway—ideal for armor plating, tools, and maybe even mounted weapons.
He moved silently between them, each looting op taking hours of careful planning, silent kills, and near-encounters. But by sundown, Aiden had cleaned out three of the four zones.
By the time the last rays of sunlight dipped behind the skyline, Aiden returned to the truck with a backpack filled with hard-earned loot. Blood smeared his gloves, and sweat dripped from his brow—but his eyes were sharp, focused, and full of fire.
Under the looming concrete skeleton of a half-collapsed overpass, Aiden maneuvered his truck carefully into the shadows beneath the highway. The rumble of its custom-engineered engine had already echoed far too loud across the broken cityscape, and it wasn't long before the undead began to stir in response to the mechanical roar.
Parking in the darkest recess he could find, Aiden quickly shut down the generator and powered off the main engine systems. The truck, now silent, seemed to vanish under layers of soot, dirt, and shadow—camouflaged by both nature and decay. He unlatched the rear and stepped out, his boots crunching softly on the gravel and scattered glass. The air under the overpass was heavy, musty, and still reeked of burnt rubber and long-dead fires.
Without wasting time, Aiden reached into his inventory and equipped two pieces of gear he hadn't tested yet: the ballistic face shield and modular tactical helmet. The gear fit snugly, clicking into place with a reassuring seal over his head. His vision adjusted slightly to the tinted glass of the face shield. It was heavier than expected but added a palpable sense of security—like walking into battle behind a visor of steel resolve.
Suddenly, the groans started.
In the distance, several walkers had picked up on the truck's arrival. A group of six now stumbled down a nearby street, drawn by the echo that had bounced off the overpass minutes earlier. Aiden ducked low behind a rusted-out sedan, crouching into the shadows with his longbow already in hand.
He nocked the first arrow.
Thud!
The first walker crumpled to the ground, an arrow buried deep into the side of its head. Its body spasmed once, then stilled. The others didn't react much—just turned slightly, shambling in the general direction of the sound.
Aiden waited.
He kept his breathing slow, his hands steady. It wasn't that he was afraid—he wasn't anymore. But he was learning. Still new to the ways of the bow, he needed clean, close shots. Distance would only waste arrows.
As the next two walkers got within five meters, he took aim again.
Thwap!
The second went down—clean kill, center of the skull. The third moved faster, arms twitching in unnatural jerks. Aiden missed the first shot—whiff!—the arrow clattered off the pavement behind it.
"Shit," he muttered, quickly notching another.
The third shot found home. Three down.
The remaining walkers, now agitated, moved faster. One snarled, jaws snapping, and another let out a low, wet gurgle as it limped on a broken leg.
Aiden backed up, drew again, and this time waited until one was nearly within arm's reach. The bowstring creaked—
Thunk!
Four down.
He stepped back, pivoted slightly, and lined up the fifth shot. His hands trembled slightly from the tension, but he let the arrow fly.
Crack!
It pierced the jaw and went out the back of the neck—an ugly but effective kill.
Five.
The last walker tripped over a piece of rebar sticking out of the ground, tumbling into a kneeling posture. Aiden walked toward it carefully, drew the string to full tension, and let the arrow loose point-blank.
Six down.
[Ding!]+12 EXP
(6 Walkers Eliminated × 2 EXP)
He exhaled and allowed himself a moment to savor the accomplishment. The kills were clean—mostly. He still missed one, still needed to learn the bow's handling and tension better, but he was improving. One kill at a time.
Aiden retrieved what arrows he could from the corpses, yanking them free and wiping them clean on a discarded raincoat nearby. Two were too bent to reuse, but four were still serviceable. Not a bad exchange.
With the immediate threat handled and the truck now well-hidden beneath the overpass, Aiden glanced back toward the city's broken skyline. The day was far from over. There were safe zones to breach, equipment to scavenge, and a growing need to build something stronger.
But for now, he felt a little more dangerous.
Aiden moved methodically among the fresh corpses, his boots pressing down into the cracked pavement still warm with the last echoes of violence. The walkers lay sprawled in disjointed heaps, limbs twisted, lifeless eyes staring into the void. He wasn't sentimental—he had learned not to be—but he was efficient. Nothing would go to waste.
He crouched beside the first body, brushing aside the thin layer of grime and ash on the walker's shredded jacket. His gloved hands slipped into the pockets, pulling free a crumpled roll of pennies, a pair of keys, and a half-shattered burner phone. He examined each item carefully. The keys were useless without a match, but the phone? Even broken, its components—microchips, resistors, lithium cells—could be salvaged. Into the inventory it went.
[Item Acquired: Damaged Burner Phone ×1][Item Acquired: Roll of U.S. Pennies ×1]
Aiden stood, moved to the next, and repeated the process. This one had been a teenager once, judging by the smaller frame and a faded varsity patch still sewn onto the sleeve. Aiden didn't dwell. He tugged off the hoodie, then the shirt beneath, stacking the torn clothing into a pile next to him. The fabric would serve well as rags—for cleaning, bandaging, or fashioning makeshift oil filters or torch wicks. Everything had a second use in this world.
[Item Acquired: Dirty Hoodie Fabric (Rag-grade) ×1][Item Acquired: Cotton Undershirt Scraps ×1]
He worked fast but deliberately. From one body he retrieved a lighter, scorched but still functional. From another, a pocketknife with a cracked handle but a decently sharp blade. A third corpse had a fanny pack containing chewing gum wrappers, a small bottle of rubbing alcohol, and a rusted AA battery. Aiden grinned faintly—score. The alcohol alone could sterilize wounds or help light fires.
[Item Acquired: Rubbing Alcohol (Half-Empty)][Item Acquired: AA Battery (Corroded)][Item Acquired: Broken Pocketknife ×1]
From the last two bodies, he stripped away more clothing. He cut sleeves, tore pants into strips, and rolled them tightly before stowing them away. They smelled of rot, but they'd be washed and purified with the stash of disinfectants he'd collected back at the mall.
[Crafting Material Added: Improvised Cloth Rags ×5]
He gathered the coins from several pockets—quarters, dimes, a few nickels—and tossed them into a small pouch hanging from his belt. Eventually, he'd melt them down, maybe turn them into arrowheads or trade bits if society ever rebooted into something semi-functional again.
[Item Acquired: Assorted U.S. Coins (Melt-grade) ×23]
Aiden gave one final glance at the bodies before walking away. He wasn't cruel, but neither did he linger on what they once were. They were just another part of the world now. Resources.
As he moved back toward the overpass, his inventory fuller and his mind already turning over the possibilities of his salvaged goods, Aiden felt the chill evening breeze roll across the cracked highway. The day's mission had only begun, and the ruins of Atlanta still held secrets.
And he intended to claim them alll
Aiden crouched low on the rooftop of a crumbling laundromat, the evening sun casting long shadows across the broken cityscape. Atlanta stretched before him like a scarred battlefield—silent in some places, moaning in others. A single block ahead, nestled between the remnants of a pharmacy and a wrecked parking garage, stood the Atlanta Police Department building. Its stone facade bore the marks of time and conflict—scorched black in places, its windows smeared with blood and dust.
He didn't rush. This wasn't a place he could afford to enter blindly. He adjusted the grip on his bow, scanning every detail of the station like a predator waiting for the moment to strike. His eyes moved like a surveillance drone—measuring, noting, cataloging.
Main Entrance:
Two large metal-framed glass doors, cracked but still intact. They were shut but not barricaded. A pair of walkers in torn uniforms shambled lazily outside, as if still doing their last patrol. One wore a police vest half melted from fire. A third walker, pinned beneath a fallen light post near the steps, snapped its jaw with blind fury.
Windows:
Several ground-floor windows were either broken or boarded up. On the second floor, one remained cracked open. Aiden marked that one—it might be his entry point. If he could scale the neighboring structure and cross over, he could bypass the main doors entirely.
Side Alley Access:
To the left of the building, a narrow alley. Overflowing dumpsters. Trash bags rotting in piles. He spotted movement—four walkers huddled in the dark near a service door. That door was marked "AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL ONLY" and had a keypad beside it. Locked for sure, unless the system had died with the city.
Rooftop Access:
The top of the station held a small structure, likely a stairwell exit or maintenance room. No walkers on the roof that he could see. But a rusted ladder clung to the side wall of the adjacent pharmacy. If he could get to the pharmacy roof, then to the station's roof… that was his cleanest point of entry.
Surrounding Area
:Sixteen walkers in total, at least. Scattered, slow, but alert. A few leaned against burned-out vehicles. A few more milled near an abandoned squad car, drawn by the faint beep of a dying battery still flashing red. He could use that—a distraction.
Aiden took a slow breath, his black tactical jacket fluttering faintly in the wind. He knelt and pulled a pen from his sling pack, jotting down notes on the crude paper map he'd started marking up. Each building. Each alley. The wind direction. The possible bottlenecks.
He didn't intend to just loot the place.
He intended to strip it clean.
Targets inside were likely:
Weapons locker
Ammo storage
First aid cabinets
Riot gear
Evidence room
Survivor logs or digital records
Possibly fuel or a generator in the basement
But getting in would be the hard part. The station was old, solidly built. It would echo with every footstep. Aiden couldn't just go in guns blazing—especially not with his limited 9mm ammo. He'd have to be quiet. Precise. Calculated.
He watched for another five minutes, memorizing every movement of the walkers, every twitch of their heads, every scuff of their dragging feet. He even timed their lazy, looping routes around the front steps.
When the plan was set in his mind, he whispered to himself with a faint smirk, "One way or another… this place is mine by morning."
And with that, he stood and silently retreated from the roof—ready to prepare for tonight's infiltration.