As the sun dipped below the edge of the crumbled horizon, a blanket of night cloaked the ruined city in shadow. Darkness was not just a veil now—it was a weapon, and Aiden wielded it like a blade. Every corner, every alley, every broken streetlamp became part of his battlefield. From his rooftop perch, the Atlanta Police Station loomed quiet and still ahead, its frame partially consumed by the deep blue haze of night.
Aiden descended from the rooftops like a phantom, his boots muffled against the cracked concrete. The tension in the air was thick, palpable, like the whole city held its breath. But he thrived in that tension. He was a ghost now—silent, invisible, deadly.
He reached into the side pocket of his duffel bag and pulled out a few key items he'd collected along the way: an empty soda can, a handful of small screws, and a metal bolt. With practiced efficiency, he loaded the can and sealed it with duct tape—makeshift noise grenade. He lobbed it into the alley beside the station.
Clink. Clink. Rattle. Clatter.
The sound echoed like a dinner bell in a graveyard.
Walkers turned, moaning lowly, their decomposed heads swiveling toward the noise. A group of four peeled off from the building's front steps, shambling toward the alley, hungry, mindless.
Aiden moved fast—slipping through shadows, hugging walls, keeping low. As the first walker turned the alley corner, he struck.
THWIP.An arrow pierced the skull clean through the eye socket—instant drop.
He stepped forward, retrieving the arrow with a clean tug, then moved on the second walker. This time, he used his tactical knife, sliding behind the rotting figure and driving the blade deep into the brainstem with a crunching sound. He caught the body as it collapsed, lowering it gently to the ground.
The third and fourth fell just as quickly. One distracted by the noise; the other stunned by the flash of his penlight—brief, precise, blinding. Another arrow, another kill.
[Ding!][+8 EXP]
He dragged the bodies into the shadows, wiping his blade and arrows clean. Every corpse was a lesson. Every kill was a step closer.
He circled around the rear of the station now, where another cluster of walkers loitered near the dumpsters. He picked up a chunk of broken concrete and hurled it down a side alley with a sharp crack. The walkers turned and stumbled toward the source. He crouched low in wait—then moved like a striking serpent.
They never saw him coming.
He used a crowbar for the next kill zone—swinging from behind with devastating force. One head caved in with a wet crack. Another fell to a quiet arrow through the temple. Each movement was deliberate, trained, perfected through repetition and necessity.
By the time midnight rolled around, the area surrounding the police station had been cleared. Walkers that once roamed the block now lay in broken heaps, piled behind dumpsters and parked cars like discarded garbage.
Kill Count: 16
[+32 EXP]
[Silent Takedowns Bonus: +8 EXP]
Aiden crouched beside a fallen body, breathing steady. He reached into his pouch and pulled out a rag to wipe his blade again, then checked his bowstring for wear. Still tight. Still strong.
The station ahead now looked different—not imposing, not terrifying. Vulnerable.
He glanced at the dark second-floor window, the one he'd marked earlier. That would be his entry point. But first, he set another noise trap across the street—a timed diversion. A broken phone with a working speaker set to ring on a 2-minute delay.
He whispered to himself, voice low and cold, "Let's open the door…"
And with that, he vanished into the dark again—toward the station wall, toward the rooftop ladder, toward the beginning of the raid.
Inside the Atlanta Police Station, the absence of power had turned the building into a tomb of silence and shadow. The only light was the soft shimmer of moonlight filtering through cracked and grimy windows—barely enough to outline shapes, let alone navigate or fight.
But Aiden came prepared.
He pulled the night vision goggles from his side pouch and slipped them over his eyes. The device whirred softly as it powered up, though a flicker reminded him of what he already knew: only one lens worked. The right side remained dark, a dead socket, while the left bathed his vision in that eerie green tint. It wasn't perfect, but it was enough—just enough.
He adjusted the strap, blinking into the glowing half-vision. Shapes materialized before him—desks, fallen chairs, cracked walls, and most importantly… movement. Slow, dragging, shuffling movement.
There were still walkers inside.
Aiden's breath was steady as he crept forward, hugging the wall with one shoulder. He passed an abandoned reception desk, where dried blood was smeared across the shattered glass partition. The low groans of the dead echoed through the corridors, bouncing off the plaster and brick like ghostly whispers. He moved silently, one step at a time, careful not to disturb the debris-littered floor.
He spotted the first one near the armory door. A tall, decayed former officer, badge still dangling from its half-torn shirt. Its back was to him, swaying slightly in that strange, undead rhythm. Aiden pulled an arrow from his quiver, nocked it, took a breath, and—
THWIP.The arrow sailed and struck true, puncturing the skull just above the ear. The walker dropped without a sound.
[Ding!][+2 EXP | Silent Kill Bonus +1]
Aiden was already moving again, arrow retrieved in one smooth motion. He crept past an evidence room, pausing only to scan with his single working lens. Another walker, slumped against the wall. It stirred as he approached—too late.
Aiden drove his tactical knife deep into its skull, pressing his forearm across its jaw to silence the final gasp.
[+2 EXP]
He continued deeper. The hallway turned to cells, the place where criminals once sat behind bars… now broken open, crawling with forgotten bodies. But most were inert—long since rotted into skeletons. Still, Aiden moved cautiously.
He passed by a stairwell. Something clanged above. He froze.
Another walker appeared, half-dressed in a SWAT uniform, helmet still intact but jaw missing entirely. It had no groan—just the wet slap of its feet on the stairs. Aiden pulled out a crowbar for this one.
When it lunged, he sidestepped and brought the weapon down in a brutal arc. The crack echoed off the walls, but it was fast. Clean. One more down.
[+2 EXP]
Now came the reward.
He made his way to the armory, his goal from the beginning. The reinforced steel door had been blown partially open—perhaps in desperation by former survivors. Aiden squeezed through the gap.
Inside, his single night-vision lens illuminated a treasure trove:
Three AR-15s, dusty but functional
Tactical vests, one of which he quickly stored in his system inventory
Boxes of 5.56mm rounds
A double-barrel shotgun with a cracked but repairable stock
9mm and .45 ACP ammunition
Flashbangs and smoke grenades
Riot gear helmet (partial damage)
Medical supplies: gauze, antiseptic, tourniquets, combat bandages
A bolt cutter
Crowbars and breaching tools
All were swept into his inventory with practiced precision.
Aiden lingered only briefly before moving to the interrogation rooms, finding a few untouched lockers with more spare gear: flashlights, handcuffs, radios, and some backup batteries.
By the time he'd cleared the lower floor, five more walkers had fallen—each one dispatched quietly and cleanly.
[Total Walkers Killed Inside: 8][Total EXP Gained: 24]
Aiden finally moved to the second floor, using the stairwell carefully and silently. No movement. Just dust and memory.
He found the chief's office, ransacked but not fully looted. In a hidden drawer beneath the desk, he found two useful things:
A small key ring, possibly for secured evidence lockers
A handwritten map showing safehouse locations used by officers before the fall
He grinned. "Jackpot."
After another sweep of the upper floor and finding nothing living or moving, Aiden returned to the armory, double-checking the seals, then finally exited back into the dark streets.
Night still ruled the city. But Aiden ruled the night.
With bloodied blade and one working lens of green glow, he vanished into the dark again—silent, unseen, unstoppable.
Before Aiden left the hollowed husk of the Atlanta Police Station, he turned his attention to the final, silent witnesses to the chaos that had once filled these halls—the walkers he had taken down one by one. Each corpse, now just a twitching memory of the danger they once posed, still held potential. Not for danger… but for salvage.
His boots made almost no sound as he stepped across the tiled floor, green-hued night vision casting strange shadows over the ruined station. He knelt by the first body—the one wearing the ruined SWAT uniform. Blood had pooled beneath it, sticky and dark, and yet Aiden kept his hands steady as he searched.
He pried open the vest pouches, finding:
A half-full magazine of 5.56mm rounds,
A bent tactical flashlight with a cracked lens,
A multi-tool, rusted but salvageable,
Dented body armor plating—too damaged for full use, but good for crafting.
He placed them into his system inventory, each item vanishing with a faint hum as the interface pinged confirmation.
Moving on, Aiden stripped what he could from each fallen walker:
Loose coins from pockets—worthless now, but valuable for melting into makeshift tools or projectiles.
Phone parts—screens shattered, but circuitry and lithium batteries were always useful.
Lighters—two still had fluid, and one looked nearly full.
Clothing—ripped and bloodstained, but fabric was fabric. He stripped sleeves, tore pant legs into wide strips. Rags could be used for bandages, fire starters, or even bindings.
Shoelaces, belts, and metal buttons—all collected for their utility.
One walker had a broken radio still clipped to its belt. Aiden took that, too. You never knew what parts could be repurposed—spare wires, coils, or even a working mic.
The most surprising find was on one of the officers—A small, brass key hidden in a sock. There were no markings on it, but Aiden smirked. "Always hide things where no one wants to look," he muttered. That would go into the inventory, too—an unknown variable for another day.
By the time he was done, he'd picked the remains clean of anything remotely usable. In total, from the eight corpses inside, he had scavenged:
12 coins, various types
3 lighters
5 usable rags
1 partially working radio
1 tactical flashlight (damaged)
1 multi-tool
1 key (unmarked)
3 phone batteries and microchips
Shoelaces, belts, and buttons
Damaged plating for crafting
Half a mag of 5.56mm rounds
He gave the last body a once-over, then stood up, rolling his shoulder and checking his gear. His ear still ached from Merle's shot, but the pain had dulled to a memory now, wrapped and healing.
"Every piece counts," he murmured to himself, before slipping back into the night. He paused only once to glance up at the moon breaking through the clouds above the skyline.
Then, with the softest of footsteps, he vanished again—another ghost in a city of the dead.
Under the cover of darkness, Aiden moved swiftly and quietly through the back alleys, his path illuminated only by the faintest gleam of moonlight. The weight of the day hung on him—dust, blood, and tension clung to his skin and bones like a second layer. But now, with the police station looted and the night still young, it was time to return to the only sanctuary he could trust: his truck.
The modified behemoth of steel and survival waited beneath the overpass, nestled in the shadows like a sleeping beast. Sheet metal armor lined the sides, heavy chains wrapped around the bumpers, and welded bars framed the windows. Camouflage netting covered the top, blending it into the surroundings. As he approached, the reflection of his own figure in the cracked side mirror looked more like a lone warrior than a survivor.
He unlocked the back and climbed inside, shutting the door behind him with a soft metallic click. The inside was cramped but organized with militant precision. On one side, a shelf of supplies: canned goods, MREs, bottled water, and cooking utensils. Above that, crates secured with straps held tools, ammo, and fuel canisters. On the other, a bolted-down cot with a foam mattress and a thick sleeping bag. Hooks along the walls held his bow, quiver, machete, and his M9 sidearm.
The first thing he did was strip off his upper layers. His jacket hit the hook with a wet slap—drenched in sweat and gore. Aiden grabbed a rag and a bottle of water, wiping down his face, arms, and hands. He opened a sealed canister of antiseptic wipes and began cleaning around the bandaged wound on his ear, checking for signs of infection. It looked clean enough, though the skin still throbbed with dull heat.
Next came food. He pulled out a steel mess kit and set it on a small fold-out table, clicking on a battery-powered stove and igniting it with a flick of his lighter. The soft blue flame hissed gently, casting flickering shadows around the interior. He opened an MRE packet—chili mac—and dumped it into the pot, stirring as it warmed.
While it cooked, he pulled out a water bottle and drank deeply, letting the cool liquid wash away the grit in his throat. The smell of the food filled the space, comforting in a primal way. When it was ready, he poured the steaming mix into a bowl and ate slowly, savoring each bite, even if the taste was still metallic and bland. Calories were calories, and warmth was a luxury.
After the meal, Aiden took the time to log notes into his battered notebook. He jotted down the day's kills, walker movement patterns around the station, the layout of the safe zone ruins, and—importantly—the unknown brass key he had found. Aiden didn't believe in luck. But in this world, information and preparedness were just as good.
Finally, he turned off the stove, cleaned the bowl, and packed everything back in its place. The cot creaked slightly as he sat down, pulling off his boots and resting his feet for the first time in hours. He leaned back, exhaling, the tension finally leaving his shoulders. The truck's metal walls offered more safety than anything else in the world at this moment.
With the sound of distant groans carried on the wind outside, Aiden unstrapped his helmet and face shield, laid down in the bolted-down bed, and pulled the sleeping bag over himself. His eyes grew heavy. The world outside was chaos, but in here—here was order.
"Tomorrow," he whispered to himself. "Tomorrow, I will find the next safe zone."
And with that, Aiden drifted off into sleep, the hum of his truck's generator fading into silence, his dreams filled with fire, blood, and the glint of survival.