After what felt like an eternity wrapped in the comforting darkness of sleep, Aiden stirred beneath the tousled covers, eyes fluttering open slowly, reluctantly. The room was now dimly lit by the muted gray of early morning, the kind that bleeds in softly through the curtains before the sun has fully committed to rising. Dust motes hung motionless in the pale light like flecks of memory suspended in air, and everything was still, save for the occasional groan of distant pipes or the soft whisper of wind brushing against the hotel's old windows.
For a moment, he remained motionless, staring blankly at the ceiling—a faint, hairline crack ran across it like a crooked map. His mind was still emerging from the layers of deep rest, piecing together fragments of dreams and the reality waiting on the other side of consciousness. Then, with a low exhale, he turned onto his side, the blanket slipping off his shoulder in a slow cascade, and sat up with a heavy groan.
The floor was cold beneath his bare feet as they touched down, the boards cool and firm, reminding him that the world had resumed spinning and he would have to move with it. He rubbed the back of his neck, muscles stiff from a night of uneasy shifting, and blinked the sleep from his eyes. The air had that heavy, musty quality of old buildings, tinged faintly with the scent of stale air freshener and aged upholstery.
His backpack still lay where he had thrown it the night before—crumpled against the foot of the dresser, the fabric twisted like a discarded thought. He reached for it, grabbing the strap with one hand and hoisting it over his shoulder with practiced ease. The contents shifted and clinked faintly inside—not heavy, but just enough to feel real. A couple of sealed protein bars, a collapsible water bottle half-filled from the tap, a compact multi-tool, and a well-worn map folded into a side pocket. Aiden kept only the basics in there, the kind of stuff someone might expect him to have on hand. Most of what he needed was safely stored in his system inventory, weightless and protected, but walking around empty-handed drew too much attention. Better to look like a traveler than a mystery.
Then, before heading out, he did a quick sweep of the room, instinct guiding his eyes across every surface like a scavenger retracing his own steps.
He crouched beside the bed, running his hand along the floorboards in case something had fallen during the night—a charger cable, a wallet, a keycard. A lone pen cap was discovered, dusty and forgotten beneath the dresser. He flicked it aside.
His eyes scanned the bedside table. The drawer was half open, its contents sparse: a tattered phone book, a spent matchbook from a bar he didn't recognize, and an empty glass that still bore the faint lip ring of yesterday's water. He gave it no more than a glance before closing it with a soft click.
In the bathroom, he flicked on the light—harsh and flickering—and opened the medicine cabinet, mostly out of habit. Nothing useful: a half-used hotel soap, a cracked comb, and a single band-aid that had turned yellow with age. He closed it again.
He opened the closet, more out of curiosity than need. The hangers creaked slightly as they swung, empty except for one wire hanger with a plastic dry-cleaning bag still half-draped over it. In the back corner, someone had left a single black sock, dust gathered around it in a crescent. He left it untouched.
Finally, he returned to the main room, giving it one last glance—the way you look at a place when you're not sure you'll ever see it again. Nothing valuable, nothing useful, nothing left behind.
With one last tug on the backpack strap, securing it across his shoulder, Aiden turned and walked to the door. His hand paused on the handle for a second longer than necessary. Then, without a word, he stepped out into the silent hallway, letting the door close behind him with a soft, final click.
Aiden stood silently in front of the hotel entrance, the rusted double doors slightly ajar, creaking ever so faintly in the wind. The late afternoon sun cast long, golden shadows across the cracked pavement, and somewhere in the distance, a crow called out—a lonely, hollow sound that only deepened the eerie silence of the abandoned cityscape. Dust swirled at his feet with each passing gust, dancing in the fading light like ash from a long-dead fire.
He took a deep breath, steadying himself. The once-bustling hotel loomed behind him, its windows shattered, curtains flapping like tattered ghosts. He had been searching this place for supplies, shelter, maybe even signs of other survivors—but it had come up empty, like so many places before it.
Aiden rubbed the back of his neck and looked around, scanning the street for movement. The world felt too quiet, too still. It wasn't safety—it was the kind of silence that made the skin crawl. He could feel the weight of it pressing down on his chest, making it hard to think. Harder still to breathe. But he had to keep moving. Standing still meant falling behind, and falling behind… meant dying.
That's when the thought hit him—sudden, clear, almost like a whisper in the back of his mind.
The hospital.
The place where it all began. Not just for Rick Grimes in the show The Walking Dead, but for Aiden too, in a strange, mirrored way. That hospital was the first major landmark he had passed through after waking up alone in the chaos of the outbreak. Back then, he'd barely had time to process what he was seeing—his focus had been on survival. The rows upon rows of bodies laid out in the courtyard, the air thick with the stench of rot and decay, had been enough to make his stomach churn. He hadn't dared linger long, too afraid of what else might be lurking in the shadows.
But now, with a clearer head and more experience under his belt, he realized he might have overlooked something important.
Back in the early days, the military had tried to establish safe zones around major infrastructure—hospitals, police stations, and government buildings. If there had been a serious military presence at the hospital, then there was a chance, however small, that something had been left behind. Equipment, weapons, rations, medical supplies—anything could make the difference now. He had been so focused on the bodies and the horror of the scene that he hadn't thought to check the tents.
Damn, he thought, feeling a twinge of frustration at his earlier fear. I should've looked closer.
He turned slowly, eyes now fixed in the direction of the hospital, which lay just a few blocks away. The tall silhouette of the structure was still visible beyond the ruined skyline, the red "EMERGENCY" sign just barely hanging on above the collapsed awning. Even from here, the memories came flooding back—the flicker of fluorescent lights in the halls, the groaning of a half-dead patient dragging itself behind a curtain, the stillness of the morgue where he'd nearly made his final stand.
But now wasn't the time for ghosts.
Aiden adjusted the straps on his backpack and began walking. His boots crunched over broken glass and scattered gravel as he moved steadily down the street. Now and then, he paused to listen—a trick he had learned early on. Listen for footsteps, groans, and movement. The infected didn't hide well, but they had a way of sneaking up when your mind wandered.
As he neared the hospital, the smell returned—faint but unmistakable. Death lingered here. The rows of corpses were still there, though more decayed, less human now than before. Some had been disturbed, others had been picked clean by scavengers, both human and animal. Aiden kept his eyes forward, refusing to let the sight shake him.
He made his way to the side of the hospital, where the military had set up their makeshift outpost. Green canvas tents, half-collapsed and faded by sun and rain, still stood like sentinels of a lost time. The U.S. Army logos were barely visible now, smeared with dirt and blood. Inside, crates lay unopened, some marked "MEDICAL" in bold, stenciled letters. Others were unmarked, their lids screwed shut tight.
Aiden's heart pounded as he stepped inside the first tent. The air was stale and heavy with mildew. Crouching beside one of the crates, he pried it open with a rusted crowbar he'd picked up in a truck he had looted a while ago on his way here. The wood creaked and splintered, then gave way.
Inside: bandages, sealed IV kits, antiseptic, painkillers.
His breath caught in his throat. This was gold.
He opened another. MREs—meals ready to eat. Dozens of them. Still sealed.
Another crate. Ammunition. 5.56 rounds. A few loaded magazines. A sidearm.
Jackpot.
Aiden sat back on his heels for a moment, letting the wave of relief wash over him. For the first time in weeks, he felt like he had a real chance. Not just to survive another day, but maybe to push further, to find others, to start building something again.
This place—the hospital that had once filled him with dread—might just be the beginning of something new.
Aiden worked quickly but methodically, his movements practiced and deliberate. He scavenged everything of value from the tent—medical supplies, sealed MREs, ammunition, even spare clothing that hadn't yet succumbed to rot. With a few practiced gestures, he transferred it all into his system inventory—his lifeline in this new world. The virtual interface, a relic of advanced pre-collapse tech, blinked faintly in the corner of his vision, confirming each item with a soft, reassuring ping.
His fingers closed around the sidearm he'd found in one of the bottom crates. It was a standard-issue M9, scratched and worn from use, but solid and dependable. The grip felt familiar in his hand, like an extension of himself—cold metal, but somehow comforting. He checked the chamber. Loaded. Safety on. A small smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. It wasn't much, but it was something. He tucked the pistol into the side of his pants, snug against his hip, and adjusted his jacket to cover it.
Still crouched, Aiden paused.
The silence was deafening.
The distant groan of twisted metal. The flap of canvas as the wind brushed past. Somewhere beyond the fence, a lone walker shuffled aimlessly, the soft thud of its dragging footfall almost lost beneath the creak of hospital signage swaying on its rusted hinges.
He stilled his breathing, ears straining.
Nothing close. Not yet.
He rose to his feet slowly, careful not to disturb the tent's flimsy structure. The last thing he needed was noise. Every sound was a risk now—every misplaced footstep, every clatter of gear could summon death.
He moved on to the next tent, quieter than a shadow. Inside, the remnants of a former triage zone were still visible—cots, bloodstained sheets, empty IV stands. The smell was worse here, heavier, like copper and mildew and time. A body lay slumped in one corner, draped in fatigues, its jaw slack and flesh withered to parchment. It hadn't turned—he could tell from the darkened veins and sunken eyes—but he gave it a wide berth all the same.
Another crate. This one contained morphine, surgical tools, and a bundle of sealed combat gauze. Into the inventory they went, each item a potential miracle in the right moment.
He glanced out through the torn fabric of the tent, eyes scanning the perimeter. The city beyond the courtyard remained eerily still. Burned-out cars and debris cluttered the road, and buildings stood like hollowed bones against the dimming sky. No movement. No sound.
Still, his instincts screamed at him not to linger.
He ducked into one last tent—the largest—and immediately froze.
The canvas walls were spattered with dark stains, long dried. In the center, a table was overturned, and a pile of medical gear lay scattered across the floor. At the back of the tent, something moved. A flicker. A rustle.
Aiden dropped low, heart hammering, hand drifting to the grip of his new sidearm.
The movement stopped.
He waited. Ten seconds. Twenty.
A rat scurried into the open, its eyes glowing faintly in the low light, then disappeared through a tear in the fabric.
He exhaled slowly, muscles unclenching.
"Damn rats," he muttered under his breath.
After confirming the tent was empty, he looted what he could—salvaging another box of rations and a set of night vision goggles, the lenses cracked but still potentially usable. He added them to the system, his interface now showing a healthy inventory, more gear than he'd seen in weeks. More than enough to keep him going.
He stepped out into the open again, the last of the sun dipping below the horizon. Shadows stretched long across the hospital courtyard, and the wind was picking up, whispering through broken windows and skeletal trees. The real danger would be moving soon. Nightfall made the infected more active—and worse, it made other scavengers bolder.
Aiden took one last look at the tents.
"Whoever was stationed here tried to hold the line," he said quietly. "But the line never holds."
He turned and moved out, staying low, silent, his eyes constantly scanning. Every alley, every rooftop, every dark doorway could hide something. But now he had supplies, weapons, and a direction. The hospital had given him more than just gear—it had given him purpose again.
And in this world, purpose was everything.
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