ABOUT ME: Call me B! New-ish to the tumblr scene, and lover of all things Formula One!
Full time Kimi Antonelli and Oscar Piastri defender.
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â°â†Surprise posts may happen, depending on how I feel
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â°â†As of now, Iâll only be writing driver x driver!
â°â†Although my blog is 18+ only, there will be NO SMUT here. Theres plenty of other writers that can do it beautifully and if you want recs just DM me!
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So freaking late with this đ. I canât believe itâs already July! I feel like June flew by, but Iâm really excited for whatâs coming this month. Things are definitely picking up (in every sense), and Iâm so excited about it!
Thank you again for all the love latelyâit genuinely keeps me going. I read everything, even if I donât always know how to respond properly <3
My posting schedule for the month of July is as follows:
Series:
PLOTD (zombie AU)
âą Every Sunday + Wednesday (Itâs getting worse. Thatâs all Iâll say.)
One-Shots
âą July 12 â âMidnight, No Filterâ (Lisack)
âą July 18 â âShared Custody of One Braincellâ (Bearnelli)
âą July 26 â âAfter Midnight, Still Yoursâ (Lisack)
Other Notes:
Requests are open! Please refer to my request rules before making one!
Please keep checking tagsâsome upcoming PLOTD chapters are heavier
Reblogs and Likes are always appreciated â€ïž
Thank you for being here, truly. I appreciate every single one of you more than I can say.
Summary: Beneath a sickly green sky in Hillsboro, a desperate search for supplies leads a group of survivors into towering grain silos hiding horrors far worse than silence. As dust, fear, and near-death close in, theyâre forced to confront a brutal truthâthere is no such thing as a safe place anymore.
The sky changed before anyone said a word about it.
It wasnât suddenânot like a storm rolling in with thunder and windâbut gradual, creeping in at the edges until the blue above them was replaced by something⊠wrong. A sickly green hue stretched across the horizon, bleeding upward into the clouds like a bruise spreading beneath skin.
Franco noticed it first.
âThatâs not normal,â he muttered.
Max followed his gaze, squinting slightly. âStorm system.â
Liam shook his head faintly. âNo warning?â
âThereâs no one left to give one,â Pierre said.
That settled it.
The road into Hillsboro felt different from the others.
Wider, flatter, surrounded by fields that stretched endlessly in all directions. Dead crops swayed in uneven waves under a wind that hadnât quite picked a direction yet. It came in burstsâsharp, sudden gusts that rattled against the Suburban before disappearing again.
Then came the sound.
Low.
Distant.
Almost mechanical.
Ollie frowned, leaning slightly toward the window. âDo you hear that?â
Kimi tilted his head. âYeah.â
It wasnât constant.
It rose and fell, uneven, like something trying to function without the power to do it properly.
Lando leaned forward from the back. âIs that⊠a siren?â
They all listened.
There it was again.
A long, hollow wail that didnât quite reach full volume before dying out.
Then starting again.
Pierre exhaled slowly. âStorm sirens.â
âBut thereâs no power,â Isack said.
âBackup systems,â Carlos replied. âOr⊠something left running.â
Max didnât like that answer.
They saw the silos before they reached the town.
Massive structures rising from the flat land like something unnaturalâtoo tall, too uniform, casting long shadows despite the muted light from above. There were dozens of them, clustered together near what used to be a processing facility.
Oscar let out a low whistle. âThatâs⊠a lot of grain.â
âUsed to be,â Liam corrected.
Now they just stood there.
Silent.
Watching.
Franco slowed as they approached.
âYou want to check it?â he asked.
Max didnât answer immediately.
His eyes moved across the structures, scanning for movement, for signs of life, for anything that might give them a reason to avoid it.
There was nothing.
Which somehow made it worse.
âWe need supplies,â Carlos said quietly.
Pierre nodded. âAnd places like this⊠they store more than grain.â
Max finally exhaled. âWe check it. Fast. Controlled.â
They parked at a distance.
Far enough to retreat if needed.
Close enough not to waste time.
The wind had picked up slightly now, carrying dust across the open ground in thin, shifting sheets. It scraped against their clothes, their skin, their eyes.
Ollie pulled his sleeve over his mouth. âThis place feels wrong.â
Kimi glanced at him briefly. âEvery place feels wrong now.â
âNot like this.â
Kimi didnât respond.
Because Ollie wasnât wrong.
The group split again.
Smaller this time.
More deliberate.
Max stayed back with Franco, Carlos, Lewis, and a few others at the nearby farmhouse to secure the perimeter and keep the vehicle ready.
Pierre took the lead for the search team.
With him: Kimi, Ollie, Liam, and Isack.
âWarehouse first,â Pierre said, nodding toward the largest structure near the silos.
âWhy there?â Ollie asked.
âProcessing plants usually keep tools, supplies, sometimes medical kits,â Pierre replied. âBetter odds than empty storage towers.â
Kimi adjusted his grip on his weapon slightly. âLetâs make it quick.â
The walk to the warehouse felt longer than it should have.
The ground was uneven, cracked in places where heavy machinery had once rolled through. Now it was just dust and silence.
And that sound.
That low, broken siren.
Still echoing faintly across the fields.
Up close, the warehouse looked worse.
The metal siding was dented inward in several places, like something had hit it repeatedly from the outside.
Or tried to get in.
The large sliding door was partially open, just enough to slip through.
Pierre paused at the entrance.
âQuiet,â he said.
They all nodded.
Inside, the air changed immediately.
Cooler.
Thicker.
Filled with the scent of dry grain and something older beneath itâsomething that had settled into the walls over time.
The space was massive.
Open.
High ceilings with rusted beams stretching overhead.
Rows of equipment sat abandoned, some toppled, others frozen mid-function.
And everywhereâ
Grain.
Spilled across the floor in uneven drifts, piled against walls, collected in corners like sand.
Ollie frowned. âThatâs⊠a lot.â
âStorage overflow,â Liam said quietly.
Kimi stepped forward carefully, boots sinking slightly into the loose grain. âWatch your footing.â
Pierre nodded. âStay close.â
The first sound came from above.
A faint shifting.
Like something settling.
They all froze.
âWind?â Isack whispered.
Kimi listened carefully.
âNo,â he said.
Because the wind didnât move like that.
The second sound came from the grain itself.
Closer.
Subtle.
A faint rustling beneath the surface.
Ollieâs breath caught slightly. âDid you hear that?â
Pierre nodded slowly. âYeah.â
Liam crouched slightly, studying one of the larger piles. âThatâs not natural.â
Kimiâs grip tightened.
âBack up,â he said quietly.
The grain had shifted again.
This time, visibly.
A small ripple across the surface.
Then another.
And another.
Like something underneath was trying to move.
Isack took a step back. âNope.â
Pierre raised a hand, signaling for silence.
They all held still.
Watching.
Waiting.
Thenâ
A hand broke through the surface.
Gray.
Decayed.
Twitching.
Ollie stumbled back immediately. âOhââ
The rest of the body followed.
Slow.
Dragging.
The infected pulled itself free from the grain, movements muffled by the loose material still clinging to it. Its head jerked unnaturally, jaw hanging open as it let out a low, broken sound.
Not loud.
But close.
Too close.
The grain shifted again.
Multiple points now.
Multiple shapes rising.
Pierre swore under his breath. âTheyâre buried in it.â
âWhy?â Isack asked, panic creeping into his voice.
âNo idea,â Liam replied.
Kimi didnât wait for more.
âMove,â he said.
They backed away slowly at first.
Trying not to trigger a full reaction.
But the infected were already stirring.
More hands.
More movement.
The grain itself seemed alive now, shifting in uneven waves as bodies forced their way upward.
Ollie turned. âWe need to go.â
Pierre nodded sharply. âNow.â
They moved toward the exit.
Faster now.
Less controlled.
Behind them, the sounds grew louderâthe rustling, the dragging, the low, broken calls of the infected struggling free from their grain-filled graves.
Kimi risked a glance back.
And immediately wished he hadnât.
There were more than he thought.
Far more.
âDonât run,â Pierre said, though his voice had tightened.
âWhy not?â Ollie shot back.
âBecause if we fall, weâre done.â
That was enough.
They kept moving.
Fast.
Careful.
The light from the entrance grew closer.
Almost there.
Almost outâ
Thenâ
A loud crack echoed from above.
Everyone froze instinctively.
Kimi looked up.
The ceiling beams groaned under pressure, dust falling in thin streams as something shifted overhead.
Liamâs eyes widened. âThatâs not good.â
âNo,â Pierre agreed.
It wasnât.
Not even close.
Another crack.
Louder this time.
The grain piles shifted violently.
And suddenlyâ
The entire structure felt unstable.
âRUN,â Pierre shouted.
The moment Pierre shouted, everything fell apart.
Not gradually. Not in pieces they could track or predict.
All at once.
The ceiling didnât cave in entirely, but it shiftedâviolently, unpredictably. One of the upper support beams snapped with a deafening crack, sending a cascade of dust and loose debris raining down over the grain-covered floor. The impact rippled through the piles beneath them, triggering a chain reaction that made the entire ground feel like it was moving.
Kimi lost his footing first.
His boot sank deeper than expected into the loosened grain, slipping sideways as the surface beneath him shifted like water. He caught himself before falling completely, but it slowed himâjust enough to matter.
âOllieâgo!â he shouted.
But Ollie didnât go.
He turned back.
Which was exactly what Pierre didnât want.
âDonât stop!â Pierre snapped.
But the world had already tipped into chaos.
The grain piles were collapsing inward now, not outward. Whatever unstable balance theyâd been held in before had broken, turning the floor into something treacherous and unpredictable. Each step sank deeper, dragging at their legs, threatening to pull them down.
Behind them, the infected surged.
Freed from their suffocating trap, they moved in jerking, uneven burstsâfaster than they had any right to be after being buried. Their limbs were coated in grain dust, faces obscured, mouths open in those broken, hollow sounds that echoed unnaturally in the enclosed space.
Liam nearly went down next.
Isack grabbed him before he could fully fall, hauling him upright with a strained grunt. âMove!â
âIâm tryingââ
âTry harder!â
Another beam cracked overhead.
This time, something heavier gave way.
A section of the upper structure collapsed partially, slamming down into one side of the warehouse with a thunderous crash. The force sent a shockwave through the floor, knocking all of them off balance for a split second.
That second almost killed them.
One of the infected lunged forward, arms outstretched, fingers clawing at the airâand caught the back of Ollieâs sleeve.
Ollie yanked forward instinctively, but the fabric held just long enough to pull him off-center. His foot slipped, sinking deep into the grain as he pitched forward.
âKimiâ!â
Kimi turned.
And didnât think.
He moved back toward Ollie instead of forward.
Against every instinct.
Against every logical survival rule theyâd built over the past weeks.
He grabbed Ollie by the arm and pulled hard, trying to drag him free from the shifting ground.
âGet up!â Kimi snapped.
âI canâtâ!â
The infected was already closing in again, dragging itself forward through the grain with disturbing speed.
Pierre saw it.
âLeave it!â he shouted. âKimi, MOVEââ
But Kimi didnât.
The world narrowed.
To one thing.
One choice.
Kimi reached down blindly, grabbing the first solid object his hand hitâa rusted metal tool half-buried in the grain. He didnât even register what it was, only that it had weight.
The infected lunged.
And Kimi swung.
The impact was wrong.
Too soft.
Too real.
The sound it made lodged somewhere deep in his chest, something he knew would stay there long after this moment passed.
The infected dropped instantly, collapsing into the grain with a twitch that faded just as quickly as it began.
For a secondâ
Everything stopped.
Kimi stared at it.
At what heâd just done.
At the stillness where movement had been seconds before.
His grip tightened unconsciously around the metal in his hand.
He didnât move.
Didnât breathe.
Didnât think.
âKimi!â
Ollieâs voice snapped him back.
Sharp.
Urgent.
Alive.
Kimi blinked.
Then grabbed Ollie again.
âUp,â he said, voice rough now. âNow.â
This time, Ollie got his footing.
Barely.
Together, they stumbled forward, pushing through the shifting grain toward the exit as the warehouse continued to come apart around them.
Behind them, more infected pulled free.
More movement.
More sound.
Too much.
Pierre reached the doorway first, turning immediately to help pull the others through.
âGo!â he shouted, grabbing Liamâs arm as he stumbled out into the open air.
Isack followed close behind, nearly tripping as he crossed the threshold.
Kimi and Ollie were last.
Too close.
Way too close.
Another section of the ceiling gave way.
This time directly above where theyâd just been.
The crash sent a cloud of dust and debris billowing outward, swallowing the interior of the warehouse in a thick, choking haze.
âHURRYââ Pierre snapped, but the word barely had time to land before the floor dipped hard to the left.
Kimi staggered, boots sliding in loose grain that suddenly felt more like liquid than anything solid. The surface beneath him collapsed inward in a slow, horrifying sink, dragging him down inch by inch.
âOllieâ!â
He didnât even realize heâd said it until a hand slammed into his.
Not a grab for balance.
Not an accident.
A gripâtight, desperate, immediate.
Ollieâs fingers locked around his, rough and shaking, hauling hard as the grain shifted again beneath them. For one suspended second, neither of them had solid footing. Just pressure. Just the force of holding on.
âDonâtââ Ollie started, voice strained, breath sharp. âDonât let goââ
âIâm notâ!â Kimi shot back, panic spiking as the floor lurched again.
Their hands tightened instinctively, knuckles grinding together as another section of the structure gave way behind them with a deafening crash. Dust exploded upward, thick and blinding, swallowing the air, clogging their lungs.
Someone shoutedâLiam, maybe. Pierre barked an order.
But Kimi couldnât process any of it.
All he could feel was Ollieâs hand in his.
Warm.
Alive.
There.
The world narrowed to that single point of contact as they stumbled forward together, half-running, half-falling across unstable ground that threatened to swallow them whole.
Ollie pulled. Kimi followed.
Or maybe it was the other way around.
It didnât matter.
They moved as one uneven, desperate unit, hands still locked together even as they finally hit solid flooring near the doorway. Even as Pierre grabbed Ollieâs shoulder and shoved him forward. Even as Isack dragged Kimi the last few feet out into open air.
They didnât let go.
Not until the collapse finished behind them in a thunderous roar of splintering wood and shifting grain.
Not until they were outside.
Not until the world stopped moving.
They didnât stop running.
Not immediately.
Not until theyâd put real distance between themselves and the warehouse, the sound of their own breathing loud in their ears, the wind cutting through the dust that still clung to their clothes.
Pierre was the first to slow.
âStop,â he said, turning slightly. âStop here.â
They did.
One by one.
No one spoke at first.
They just stood there.
Trying to breathe.
Trying to process.
Trying to understand how close that had been.
Ollie bent forward slightly, hands on his knees as he fought to steady his breathing. His arm stung sharply now, a thin line of blood cutting through the dust coating his skin.
Kimi noticed immediately.
âYouâre bleeding.â
Ollie glanced down. âJust a cut.â
âItâs not just a cut.â
âIâm fine.â
Kimi didnât argue.
But his hands were still shaking.
Pierre looked back toward the warehouse.
Or where it had been.
Now partially collapsed, one side completely caved in, the structure leaning at an angle that made it clear nothing inside had survived that fall.
âThose thingsâŠâ Isack muttered. âThey were just⊠buried there.â
âTrapped,â Liam said.
Pierre shook his head slightly. âOr stored.â
That thought lingered.
Uncomfortable.
Unanswered.
They started walking back toward the Suburban.
Slower now.
Each step heavier than the last.
The adrenaline was fading.
Leaving something else behind.
Halfway back, Ollie spoke.
Quiet.
Barely above the wind.
âKimi.â
Kimi glanced at him. âYeah?â
Ollie hesitated.
Then: âI thought you were going to die.â
Kimi didnât respond immediately.
âI mean it,â Ollie continued, voice tightening slightly. âWhen you turned backâwhen you didnât runâI thought that was it.â
Ollie shook his head. âThat doesnât mean you always will be.â
Neither of them spoke after that.
But the silence between them had changed.
The storm never quite broke, and somehow that made everything worse.
It followed them back from the silos like a threat that had changed its mind at the last secondâlike something that had decided to wait. The sky stayed that same nauseating green, hanging low and swollen over Hillsboro as if it were pressing down on the land, trying to flatten it. Even the wind felt wrong. It moved in uneven pulses, like breath stuttering in a dying chest.
No one said much as they trudged back toward the Suburban.
Grain dust clung to them in a pale, choking film, turning sweat into paste, turning skin into something foreign. Ollieâs arm was wrapped tight in a strip of fabric that used to be part of a shirtâGeorgeâs, judging by the faded patternâand the blood had already started to seep through in dull, rusty patches. Kimi walked beside him, close enough that their shoulders brushed every few steps, his hands still trembling despite the fact that the immediate danger was long gone.
Or at least, far enough behind them to pretend it was.
Pierre led the way, quieter than usual, his earlier confidence replaced with something sharper and more brittle. Max hung back near the rear, scanning the horizon like he expected something to come boiling out of the fields at any second. The others fell into a loose, exhausted formation between them, too drained to argue, too wired to relax.
It wasnât until the silhouette of the farmhouse came back into view that anyone finally spoke.
ââŠSo,â George said, voice rough, trying for something normal and landing somewhere just short of it, âweâre all in agreement that barns are better than grain towers, right?â
There was a beat.
âDebatable,â Max muttered.
âNot even a little,â George shot back, shaking his head. âBarns donât try to eat you from the inside out. Barns are honest. Barns are like, âhey, hereâs some hay, maybe a raccoon.â Notââ he gestured vaguely back toward the silos, ââthat.â
âThat,â Pierre said flatly, âhad supplies.â
âAnd almost buried us alive.â
Pierre didnât respond to that.
The silence that followed wasnât tense so much as it was heavyâlike everyone was carrying something they didnât know how to put down.
Kimi swallowed, glancing at Ollieâs arm. âWe should clean that again,â he said quietly. âWhen we get back.â
Ollie huffed a weak laugh. âYeah. Add it to the list.â
âYouâre not funny,â Kimi said automatically, but there was no heat in it.
âIâm hilarious,â Ollie insisted. âYouâre just in shock.â
Kimi didnât deny it.
They reached the Suburban, and for a moment, no one moved.
It sat exactly where theyâd left it, dusty and dull under the sickly sky, looking almost absurdly normal in comparison to everything theyâd just crawled out of. A piece of the old world that hadnât realized it was supposed to be dead.
Pierre exhaled slowly. âLoad up,â he said.
And just like that, they slipped back into motion.
Inside the farmhouse, the air felt different.
Not safeânever thatâbut contained. The walls, thin as they were, still created the illusion of separation from the outside world. The door shut behind them with a dull, solid sound, and it was enough to make a few shoulders drop, just slightly.
âOkay,â Max said, setting his pack down with a soft thud. âInventory check. What did we actually get for almost dying horribly?â
Pierre dropped a small bundle of salvaged goods onto the table. âCanned food. Some tools. A couple of sealed bags of grain that arenât⊠contaminated.â
George raised an eyebrow. âDefine âcontaminated.ââ
Pierre looked at him.
George held up his hands. âYou know what? Donât. I donât want to know.â
âGood call,â Max muttered.
Kimi hovered near the doorway for a second before stepping fully inside, like he was still half-expecting the ground to give way beneath him. His hands had stopped shaking as badly, but there was still a faint tremor there, something that lingered in his fingers no matter how tightly he clenched them.
Ollie noticed.
âHey,â he said quietly.
Kimi glanced up.
âYouâre good.â
Kimi hesitated. âIââ He stopped, jaw tightening. âI didnât think it would feel like that.â
Ollie didnât ask what he meant.
He didnât have to.
Kimiâs gaze dropped to his hands again. âIt was just⊠one,â he said. âJust one of them. And it stillââ
âYeah,â Ollie said softly. âThat doesnât really go away.â
Kimi let out a shaky breath. âGreat.â
âSorry.â
There was a pause.
Then, after a moment, Ollie added, quieter, âYou did what you had to.â
Kimi didnât answer right away.
When he did, it was barely above a whisper. âDoesnât mean I have to like it.â
âNo,â Ollie agreed. âIt doesnât.â
They cleaned up as best they could.
Water was still a luxury, even with the well, so everything was careful, measured. Cloth instead of full washes. Sips instead of gulps. The bucket shower from earlier sat abandoned outside, swaying slightly in the uneven wind like a relic from a different lifetimeâone where theyâd had the energy to joke about things like shaving and stubble and who got to go first.
Now, no one mentioned it.
Ollie sat on the edge of a chair while Kimi rewrapped his arm, hands steadier now that he had something practical to focus on.
âYouâre gonna have a sick scar,â Kimi muttered.
âCool,â Ollie said. âChicks love scars.â
Kimi snorted. âThere are no chicks.â
âDetails.â
Kimi tightened the bandage a little more than necessary.
Ollie winced. âOkay, rude.â
âStop talking.â
âYou started it.â
âI did not.â
âYou absolutely did.â
Kimi paused, then shook his head, a faint, reluctant smile tugging at his mouth. âYouâre impossible.â
âAnd yet,â Ollie said, âhere I am.â
Kimi glanced up at him, expression softening just slightly. âYeah,â he said. âHere you are.â
Across the room, George was pacing.
âIâm just saying,â he was in the middle of explaining, âif we ever see another silo again, we donât go near it. We justâkeep driving. We pretend it doesnât exist.â
Max leaned against the wall, arms crossed. âYou say that now.â
âNo, I mean it,â George insisted. âI am setting a boundary with the universe. No more grain towers. None. Zero. Iâm done.â
Pierre, sorting through supplies, didnât even look up. âNoted.â
âYouâre not taking this seriously.â
âI am.â
âYouâre really not.â
Pierre sighed, finally glancing over. âGeorge.â
âYeah?â
âIf there is food in a silo, we will check it.â
George stared at him. âYouâre unbelievable.â
âAnd youâre alive.â
ââŠBarely.â
Max smirked. âStill counts.â
George groaned, dragging a hand down his face. âI hate all of you.â
âNo, you donât,â Max said.
The storm sirens started again.
Low. Distant. Wrong.
They drifted in through the cracks in the walls, a hollow, mechanical wail that rose and fell without rhythm, without urgencyâjust there, like a ghost of a warning no one was left to hear.
Kimi stiffened.
Ollie glanced toward the window. âStill going,â he muttered.
âThey donât have power,â George said from across the room, frowning. âHow are they still going?â
âBackup systems,â Max said. âOld infrastructure. Some of that stuff was built to last.â
âYeah, well,â George muttered, âitâs creepy as hell.â
No one argued with that.
The sound filled the space between them, threading through conversation, through thought, through everything.
A reminder.
Not of what was comingâbut of what had already happened.
Later, as the light outside dimmed into that strange, green-tinged dusk, they gathered near the table.
Not quite a meeting.
Not quite anything official.
Just⊠proximity.
Lewis leaned forward, elbows resting on his knees. âWe move tomorrow,â he said.
There were a few quiet nods.
âAnywhere but here,â Charles said.
Lewis gave him a look. âYes.â
Max shifted slightly. âWeâll stick to smaller stops,â he added. âNo more⊠large structures unless we absolutely have to.â
George pointed at him. âThank you.â
Pierre didnât argue.
Kimi glanced toward the window again, then back at the group. âThereâs no such thing as a quiet place anymore,â he said.
It wasnât dramatic.
It wasnât even particularly loud.
But it landed.
Pierreâs jaw tightened slightly. âNo,â he agreed. âThere isnât.â
Ollie leaned back in his chair, wincing faintly as the movement pulled at his arm. âGuess that means we stop looking for one.â
Max exhaled. âYeah.â
George rubbed the back of his neck. âCool. Love that for us.â
A faint, humorless huff of laughter passed through the group.
Not real laughter.
Not like before.
But something close enough to echo it.
Outside, the silos stood unmoving against the horizon.
Dark.
Silent.
Full of things that would never truly be still.
And the storm above them lingeredâwaiting, watching, pressing down on a world that no longer knew how to breathe.
All characters and real people depicted are fictionalized for storytelling purposes. No harm or offense is intended. Content may include mature themesâreader discretion advised.
Summary: In a nameless town scarred by a failed quarantine, the group discovers that the living can be far more dangerous than the infectedâcosting them one of their own in a sudden act of violence. As grief hardens into something colder, trust fractures and survival takes on a harsher meaning, reshaping who they are before they even reach Waco.
Warnings: Death (Major), Grief Reaction, Panic Attack, Human Hostility, Mild Gore
Word Count: 4.1k+
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Nov 1, 2025, 10:00 AM
The town didnât announce itself the way towns usually did.
There was no sign on the highway. No welcome marker. No weathered billboard promising gas or food or anything resembling safety. Just a break in the road, a widening of space between trees, and suddenlyâbuildings.
Or what was left of them.
Max slowed the Suburban instinctively, even before Charles said anything.
ââŠThatâs it?â Oscar muttered from the back.
âThatâs it,â Charles confirmed.
Kimi leaned forward slightly, squinting through the windshield. âIt doesnât have a name.â
George frowned. âAll towns have names.â
âNot anymore,â Pierre said quietly.
That landed heavier than it should have.
The road into the town was cracked and uneven, swallowed at the edges by weeds pushing through asphalt like the earth was reclaiming it in real time. The closer they got, the more wrong it feltânot abandoned in the way of neglect, but abandoned in the way of something hurriedly erased.
Like people hadnât just left.
Theyâd run.
And then tried to make it look like they never existed.
The first building they passed had its windows blown outward.
Not broken inward.
Outward.
Lewis noticed it immediately. âThatâs not infected damage.â
Carlos leaned slightly to see better. âThatâs pressure.â
Maxâs jaw tightened. âExplosions?â
âOr something contained inside,â Carlos added.
No one liked that option more.
They stopped near what looked like a main street, though the word felt generous. The storefronts were stripped of signage completely. Not even broken remnantsâjust empty frames where names used to be. Like someone had peeled the identity off the buildings.
Ollie frowned. âWhy would anyone remove the signs?â
âPanic,â Liam said simply.
âOr control,â Kimi added.
That got a few looks.
Kimi shrugged. âIf you donât want people to know where they are⊠you erase the name.â
Silence followed that.
They split into two groups without discussion.
It was just what they did now.
Max led one side with Lewis, Carlos, Pierre, George, and Alex.
Franco stayed with the other groupâKimi, Ollie, Oscar, Liam, Isack, Lando, Esteban, and Gabriel.
The Suburban remained parked at the edge of the main street, angled slightly toward escape.
No one said it out loud, but everyone knew:
If something went wrong, they wouldnât be staying to fix it.
The town felt empty at first glance.
But it wasnât.
Not really.
There were signs if you knew how to read them.
A door slightly ajar.
A chair overturned too neatly.
Scratches along the inside of a storefront glass that didnât match anything outside.
George noticed all of it.
And he didnât like any of it.
âToo clean,â he muttered.
Alex glanced at him. âClean?â
George nodded toward a row of buildings. âNo bodies. No chaos. Just⊠aftermath.â
Max stopped walking. âMeaning?â
George hesitated. âMeaning someone cleared it.â
âHumans?â Pierre asked.
George didnât answer immediately.
Then: âOr something pretending to be.â
That silence came back again.
Heavier this time.
They moved deeper.
The sun climbed higher overhead, turning the town into something harsh and exposed. No shadows to hide in for long. No cover that felt meaningful.
Thatâs when they saw the first message.
Carved into concrete.
Not painted. Not written.
Scratched deep into the wall of a collapsed convenience store.
NO SAFE ROUTE HERE
Kimi crouched slightly to read it. âThatâs⊠recent.â
âHow do you know?â Ollie asked.
âTool marks,â Kimi said. âNot old rust. Not decay.â
Liam scanned the surrounding area. âSo someone was here after it fell.â
âOr during,â Esteban added quietly.
The town stretched further than expected, block after block of stripped buildings and silent intersections. The silence wasnât peaceful. It was alert. Like the place was waiting for something to happen again.
Then they found the church.
It sat slightly off-center from the main road, its doors partially hanging open, one of the stained-glass panels shattered inward.
Carlos slowed. âWe should check it.â
Max looked at him sharply. âWhy?â
âMedical supplies,â Carlos said. âChurches always have something.â
Pierre frowned. âThatâs⊠oddly specific.â
Carlos shrugged. âItâs true.â
No one argued further.
Inside, the air was cooler.
Darker.
It smelled like dust and old wood and something faintly metallic that didnât belong in a place meant for prayer.
The pews were overturned.
Not all of them.
Just enough to suggest movement had happened here recently.
Careful movement.
Controlled.
Lewis stepped forward slightly. âBasement.â
They all felt it before they saw it.
The drop in temperature.
The weight in the air.
The sense that the building went deeper than it should have.
Max signaled quietly. âDown.â
The basement stairs were narrow.
Too narrow for how many people were trying to move through them at once.
George went first, unusually quiet. Alex followed closely behind him, watching his back without needing to be told.
The light from above faded quickly.
Thenâ
Darkness.
Carlos flicked on a flashlight.
The beam cut through dust-heavy air.
And revealed them.
Three bodies.
Still.
Dormant.
Not moving.
Not yet.
âInfected,â Liam whispered.
âDonât wake them,â Isack added quickly.
No one needed that advice.
They moved carefully around the basement perimeter.
Shelves lined the wallsâsome collapsed, some still holding remnants of old supplies. Medical kits. Bandages. Half-expired antibiotics.
Carlos exhaled softly. âWorth it.â
Lando shifted slightly behind them. âWeâre not taking anything near those things, right?â
âNo,â Max said immediately. âWeâre in and out.â
The group moved quickly but cautiously, gathering what they could without making unnecessary noise.
And for a brief momentâ
It almost felt manageable.
Untilâ
The gunshot.
It didnât come from inside the church.
It came from outside.
Sharp.
Sudden.
Final.
Everyone froze.
Thenâ
A second shot.
Screaming followed instantly.
George moved before anyone else.
âAlex,â he said.
And he was already running.
The street outside had changed.
In the seconds they were gone, everything had collapsed into chaos.
A second groupâstrangers, armed, panickedâhad appeared at the far end of the street. No one knew where they came from. No one had time to ask.
Alex was already there.
Trying to help someone.
A wounded man on the ground.
Blood pooling under him.
âStop!â Max shouted.
Too late.
The strangers fired again.
Alex jerked violently as the bullet hit.
For a second, he just stood there.
Like he didnât understand.
Then he fell.
George reached him as he hit the ground.
âNoâno, no, noââ
Alex looked up at him.
His mouth moved.
No sound came out.
George pressed his hands against him immediately, like he could hold something in place that was already gone.
âStay with me,â George said, voice breaking. âStay with meâpleaseââ
Alexâs eyes flickered.
Once.
Then stopped focusing.
George made a sound that wasnât really a word.
Just pain.
Raw and immediate.
Max reacted next.
The shot that came after wasnât hesitation.
It was retaliation.
Lewis followed instantly.
Carlos too.
Pierre didnât move at first.
Then he did.
The street exploded into chaos.
Gunfire cracked through the air, echoing off empty buildings, turning the silent town into something loud and unbearable.
The strangers tried to retreat.
They didnât make it far.
George didnât notice any of it.
Not fully.
He was still on the ground with Alex.
Still holding him.
Still trying to get him to respond.
âHey,â he said again, quieter now. âHeyâlook at me.â
Alexâs hand twitched once.
Then stopped.
And that was it.
The gunfire ended quickly.
Too quickly.
Afterwards, there was only ringing silence.
Max stood over the scene, breathing hard, gun still raised slightly.
Pierre wiped blood off his sleeve without thinking.
Lewis stared at the ground like he didnât fully understand what had just happened.
Carlos didnât lower his weapon for a long time.
And Georgeâ
George didnât move at all.
Alex was gone.
That much was obvious.
But George didnât accept it immediately.
He just stayed there.
Still holding him.
Like if he stopped, it would become real.
Max took a step forward. âGeorgeâŠâ
âDonât,â George said sharply.
It wasnât loud.
But it cut through everything.
Max stopped.
For a moment, no one spoke.
The town around them remained empty.
Quiet again.
Like it had been waiting for this.
And somewhere in the distance, the wind picked up.
Carrying the smell of dust.
And smoke.
And something else.
Something worse.
No one moved to collect the bodies of the strangers.
That decision didnât need to be spoken out loudâit settled over the group naturally, heavy and immediate. Whatever those men had been, whatever reasons they might have had, they were reduced now to shapes on the pavement. Still. Silent. Irrelevant.
Max lowered his weapon first.
âCheck the perimeter,â he said, voice quieter now but no less firm. âMake sure no one else is out there.â
Lewis nodded automatically, though his movements were slower than usual. He stepped past the bodies without looking down, scanning rooftops, alleys, broken windowsâanywhere someone else might be watching.
Pierre followed him, though he hesitated for half a second as he passed Alex.
He didnât stop.
He couldnât.
George still hadnât let go.
His hands were soaked through, red and slick, pressing uselessly against a wound that didnât care how much force he applied. His breathing had gone unevenâtoo fast, too shallowâand every few seconds he tried again, adjusting his grip like there was a correct way to fix this.
âThereâs pressureâthereâs supposed to be pressureââ he muttered, voice fractured.
Carlos crouched beside him slowly. âGeorgeâŠâ
âIâve got it,â George snapped, not looking up. âIâve got it, justâjust give me a secondââ
Carlos didnât reach for him.
Didnât interrupt again.
He just stayed there, close enough to step in if needed, far enough not to make it worse.
Max turned slightly toward the rest of the group, his expression tight.
âGet the supplies,â he said. âEverything we can carry. Weâre not staying here longer than we have to.â
No one argued.
Even nowâespecially nowâthey understood.
This place wasnât safe.
Not from the infected.
From people.
Inside the church, the air felt different when they returned.
Heavier.
Like the building had absorbed what just happened outside.
Kimi moved first, quicker now, less careful about noise. He grabbed what medical supplies he could reach, shoving them into his bag with practiced efficiency.
Ollie stayed near the stairs, eyes flicking constantly between the basement and the doorway above. âWe need to go,â he whispered. âWe need to go now.â
âWe are,â Kimi replied, though his voice lacked its usual steadiness.
Liam exhaled slowly as he packed the last of the bandages. âThis is why we donât trust strangers.â
Isack didnât respond.
He didnât need to.
The three dormant infected in the basement never stirred.
Not once.
Even with the noise.
Even with the tension.
They remained still, frozen in that unnatural pause between existence and hunger.
For a moment, it almost felt like they were choosing not to wake.
And that was somehow worse.
Outside, the sunlight felt harsher.
Too bright.
Too real.
George was still on the ground.
Still holding Alex.
But something had changed.
The panic was gone.
Replaced by something quieter.
Colder.
He wasnât speaking anymore.
Just staring.
Max approached again, slower this time.
âWe have to move,â he said.
No response.
âGeorge.â
Still nothing.
Max crouched slightly, lowering himself into Georgeâs line of sight. âWe canât stay here.â
George blinked once.
Like he was coming back from somewhere far away.
ââŠI know,â he said.
But he didnât move.
It was Lewis who stepped in.
Not forcefully.
Not aggressively.
Just⊠steady.
He crouched beside George and placed a hand on his shoulder.
âHey,â Lewis said quietly.
George didnât react at first.
Then his grip tightened slightly.
Lewis swallowed. âWeâll take him with us.â
That did it.
Georgeâs expression crackedânot loudly, not dramaticallyâbut enough.
A small fracture.
A shift.
He nodded once.
Slow.
Deliberate.
âOkay,â he said.
They worked in silence after that.
Careful.
Respectful.
Pierre found a blanket in one of the abandoned storefronts. It was dusty, worn, but intact. He didnât comment on where it came from as he handed it over.
Carlos and Max helped wrap Alex.
George didnât step away.
Not once.
The Suburban felt smaller when they returned.
Even though one person less should have meant more space.
It didnât.
It felt tighter.
Heavier.
Like the air itself had thickened.
No one spoke as they loaded in.
George climbed in last, sitting near the middle, Alexâs wrapped body positioned carefully beside him. He didnât look at anyone.
Didnât acknowledge anything.
He just sat.
Hands still stained.
Shirt soaked through.
Max started the engine.
The sound broke the silence like a crack through glass.
âWhere to?â Oscar asked quietly.
Max didnât hesitate. âWaco.â
No one argued.
They drove.
And for a long time, the only sound was the road beneath them.
It was Max who noticed it first.
The second message.
Half-hidden on the side of a building as they passed through the last stretch of the town.
He tapped the dashboard lightly. âStop.â
Franco slowed.
âBack up,â Max added.
The Suburban reversed carefully.
And there it was.
Cut deep into the wall.
Deliberate.
Clear.
NORTH IS NOT SAFE EITHER
Silence settled again.
Different this time.
Sharper.
More pointed.
Kimi leaned forward slightly. âSo much for the safe route.â
Liam frowned. âOr itâs a warning.â
âOr a lie,â Pierre added.
Max stared at the message for a long moment.
Then: âWe keep going.â
Carlos glanced at him. âEven now?â
Max nodded. âEspecially now.â
They didnât speak much after that.
There wasnât anything left to say.
The town disappeared behind them slowly, swallowed again by open road and empty land.
But it didnât feel like theyâd left it.
Not really.
It stayed with them.
In the silence.
In the space where Alex should have been.
George didnât look out the window once.
He didnât speak.
Didnât react.
He just sat there, one hand resting lightly on the blanket beside him.
Like he was making sure it was still real.
After an hour, the heat started to settle in.
The day had grown hotter, the sun pressing down on the vehicle with relentless intensity. Dust kicked up behind them in long trails, visible in the side mirrors like something chasing them from a distance.
Kimi shifted slightly, wincing.
Ollie noticed immediately. âYour arm?â
âJust a graze,â Kimi said.
Max looked back. âLet me see.â
Kimi hesitated, then pulled his sleeve back slightly.
The scratch wasnât deep.
But it wasnât nothing either.
Max nodded. âClean it when we stop.â
âI will.â
Across from them, Max noticed something else.
âMax,â Carlos said quietly.
Max blinked. âYeah?â
Carlos gestured to his side.
A thin line of red.
Barely visible beneath the dust.
Max exhaled. âDidnât even feel it.â
âAdrenaline,â Carlos said.
Max gave a humorless smile. âConvenient.â
In the far seat, Lewis shifted uncomfortably.
Pierre noticed. âYou good?â
Lewis nodded too quickly. âYeah.â
âYou sure?â
ââŠYeah.â
But he pressed a hand lightly against his side anyway.
And didnât move it after.
The only one who broke completely was George.
It happened without warning.
One second he was silent.
Still.
The nextâ
He was shouting.
âWHY WOULD HE DO THAT?â
The entire vehicle jolted with the force of it.
No one answered.
Georgeâs voice cracked again. âWHY WOULD HE GO OUT THEREâWHY WOULD HEââ
His breathing spiraled, words collapsing into something less structured, less controlled.
Max turned slightly. âGeorgeââ
âI TOLD HIMââ George choked on the words. âI told himâjustâjust waitâjustââ
His hands clenched into fists, shaking violently.
Thenâ
Silence again.
Abrupt.
Total.
He leaned forward, elbows on his knees, head in his hands.
And didnât move after that.
No one tried to fix it.
There wasnât a fix.
Max exchanged a brief glance with Carlos.
Neither of them spoke.
But they both understood.
Something had shifted.
Not just grief.
Not just loss.
Something deeper.
Something that wasnât going to go away anytime soon.
They reached the outskirts of Waco just before sunset.
No one announced it.
No one pointed it out.
But the shift was obvious.
The road widened again, splitting into multiple lanes choked with abandoned vehiclesâsome burned out, others left mid-turn like their drivers had simply vanished. The buildings grew taller, more structured, though just as hollow. Smoke hung faintly in the air, not fresh, but not entirely old either.
It smelled like something that had burned recently enough to matter.
Franco slowed the Suburban instinctively.
âClear?â Oscar asked.
Max scanned the area, eyes sharp despite the exhaustion pulling at them. âClear enough.â
It wasnât reassuring.
But it was the best they were going to get.
They didnât drive deep into the city.
Not yet.
Instead, they pulled into a partially collapsed parking structure near the edge of townâconcrete levels sagging slightly but still intact enough to offer cover. The upper floors had caved in, but the ground level remained shaded, hidden from the open road.
It was defensible.
More importantly, it was quiet.
Franco cut the engine.
For a moment, no one moved.
The silence inside the vehicle had become something physicalâthick, pressing against them from all sides. Even the usual soundsâthe shifting of clothes, the quiet clearing of throatsâfelt absent.
Max finally exhaled. âWe stay here tonight.â
No one argued.
Unloading was slower than usual.
More careful.
More deliberate.
Everyone moved like they were carrying something fragile, even when they werenât holding anything at all.
George was the last to step out again.
He didnât ask for help.
Didnât look at anyone.
He just opened the door, stepped down, and stood there for a secondâlike he wasnât entirely sure where to go next.
Then he reached back inside.
And lifted Alex.
That was the moment it became real for everyone else again.
Not the shooting.
Not the blood.
This.
The weight of him.
The way George held himânot like a body, but like something still worth protecting.
Lewis looked away first.
Pierre followed.
Carlos pressed a hand briefly to his mouth, then dropped it quickly like the gesture itself was too revealing.
Max didnât look away.
He couldnât afford to.
âInside,â Max said quietly, gesturing toward a darker corner of the structure.
George nodded once.
And walked.
They set up camp without discussion.
It was muscle memory nowâassigning spaces, organizing supplies, checking entry points. Kimi and Ollie took first watch near the entrance, their silhouettes barely visible against the fading light. Liam and Isack worked together to sort through the medical supplies theyâd grabbed, their movements efficient but subdued.
No one joked.
No one filled the silence.
Even Lando, who usually had something to say, stayed quiet.
George stayed where he was.
Kneeling on the concrete.
Alex laid out in front of him, wrapped but not hidden.
Max approached slowly.
âYou should rest,â he said.
George didnât look up. âIâm fine.â
It wasnât convincing.
Max hesitated. âWeâll take watch.â
âI said Iâm fine.â
There was an edge there now.
Sharp.
New.
Max recognized it immediately, stepping back and sitting.
Carlos moved to sit beside Max after a moment. âHeâs not going to sleep.â
Max shook his head slightly. âNo.â
âYou going to force him?â
Max didnât answer right away.
Then: âNo.â
Carlos nodded. âGood.â
Time passed.
Slowly.
The sun dipped lower, dragging shadows across the concrete floor until the entire structure was swallowed in dim, gray light. The air cooled slightly, though the heat of the day still lingered in the walls around them.
Somewhere in the distance, something metallic shifted.
Then silence again.
Lewis sat with his back against a pillar, one arm wrapped loosely around his ribs. Pierre noticed the tension immediately.
âYou need that looked at,â Pierre said quietly.
Lewis shook his head. âItâs nothing.â
âYou said that before.â
âIt is.â
Pierre didnât push further.
But he didnât look convinced either.
Across the space, Kimi adjusted his grip on his arm again.
Ollie glanced over. âStill bleeding?â
âNot really.â
âLet me see.â
Kimi hesitated, then relented slightly, shifting his sleeve just enough.
Ollie winced. âThatâs deeper than you said.â
âI said it was a graze.â
âThatâs not a graze.â
Kimi gave a faint, tired smile. âItâs not a problem.â
Ollie didnât argue.
But his expression said enough.
Max sat near the center of the group, eyes constantly moving.
On the far side of the space, George finally moved.
Not much.
Just enough to reach into Alexâs bag.
He pulled something out slowly.
A small object.
Simple.
Worn.
No one could see exactly what it was from where they sat.
But they could see the way George held it.
Carefully.
Deliberately.
Like it mattered more than anything else left in the world.
The night settled fully.
Darkness filled the parking structure, broken only by the faint, controlled beam of a single flashlight set low against the ground. It cast long, distorted shadows across the wallsâfigures that moved when no one did, stretching and shifting with every slight adjustment of light.
Ollie leaned slightly toward Kimi. âYou think theyâll come back?â
Kimi didnât ask who he meant.
âThe others?â he said quietly.
Ollie nodded.
Kimi looked out toward the open entrance for a long moment. âNo.â
âWhy not?â
âThey got what they wanted.â
Ollie swallowed. âWhich was?â
Kimiâs voice didnât change. âControl.â
That word lingered.
Heavy.
Liam sat beside Isack, hands resting loosely in his lap.
âThis changes things,â Liam said after a while.
Isack nodded once. âYeah.â
âNo more helping strangers.â
It wasnât a question.
Isack didnât respond immediately.
Then: âWe help each other.â
Liam exhaled slowly. âThatâs what I meant.â
But it wasnât.
Not entirely.
Max stood eventually, stretching slightly before moving toward the entrance. Kimi glanced at him but didnât say anything as Max took position beside them.
âIâll take next watch,â Max said quietly.
âYou donât have to,â Ollie replied.
âI know.â
That was the end of that.
Behind them, George finally spoke again.
Not loudly.
Not to anyone in particular.
âI shouldâve stopped him.â
The words cut through the quiet.
Max turned slightly but didnât approach.
No one did.
George continued, voice low, almost distant. âHe always did that. Alwaysâalways tried to help first. Didnât think. Just⊠moved.â
His grip tightened slightly around the object in his hands.
âI shouldâve stopped him.â
This time, there was something else in his voice.
Not panic.
Not denial.
Something colder.
Sharper.
Max recognized it immediately.
And it unsettled him more than anything else that day.
Carlos noticed too.
He leaned slightly toward Max, voice barely audible. âHeâs changing.â
Max didnât look away from the entrance. âYeah.â
âThatâs not just grief.â
âNo.â
Carlos hesitated. âYou going to do something about it?â
All characters and real people depicted are fictionalized for storytelling purposes. No harm or offense is intended. Content may include mature themesâreader discretion advised.
Summary: As the group pushes through the vast, wind-scoured plains of Texas, grief, doubt, and quiet fractures surface inside their overcrowded vehicle while unseen threats echo across the empty land. In the growing silence of night, theyâre forced to rely on instinct, sound, and each otherâlearning that survival isnât just about outrunning the infected, but enduring whatâs left behind.
Warnings: Mention of Major Death, Grief, Emotional Distress, Confined Spaces, Mild Language
Word Count: 3.7K+
Prev. Chapter Next Chapter
Oct 24, 2025, 1:00 PM
Franco didnât say anything at first.
That was how Pierre knew it mattered.
They were all movingâpacking, checking, loading what little they had left into the Suburban with the same practiced urgency that had become second natureâbut Franco stood apart from it. Not frozen, not exactly, but⊠paused. Like heâd reached a point the rest of them hadnât yet.
Or maybe one theyâd all been avoiding.
âIâm going back down,â he said finally.
It wasnât loud.
It didnât need to be.
The room stilled anyway.
Max looked up from where he was tightening one of the straps on the supply bag. âNo.â
Franco didnât even look at him. âI have to.â
âThereâs nothing down there,â Carlos said, though his tone lacked conviction.
They all knew that wasnât true.
âThere is,â Franco replied quietly.
Silence stretched, thin and fragile.
Then Lewis exhaled, slow and steady. âHeâs right.â
Maxâs jaw tightened. âWe cleared what we could.â
âNot all of it,â Pierre said.
That pulled Maxâs attention. âPierreââ
âIâll go,â Pierre added, already moving.
Oscar stepped forward next, like it was instinct more than decision. âMe too.â
For a second, it looked like Max might argue.
Then he looked at Franco again.
At the way he hadnât moved. Hadnât wavered.
And something in his expression shifted.
ââŠFine,â Max said finally. âFast. Controlled. No risks.â
Franco nodded once.
That was all the agreement he needed.
The basement door hadnât changed.
Still closed. Still quiet. Still wrong.
Pierre reached it first, hand hovering over the handle for half a second before he forced himself to grab it and pull.
The smell hit immediately.
Damp.
Rotting.
Something deeper underneath that none of them wanted to identify too closely.
Oscar grimaced. âGod.â
âStay sharp,â Lewis said.
They moved down together.
Careful. Measured. Controlled.
The water hadnât receded.
If anything, it looked worse in daylightâmurky and still, the surface broken only by the occasional ripple that made no sense given the lack of movement.
Pierre stepped down onto the first dry step, testing it.
It held.
âFlashlight,â he said.
Oscar handed one over.
The beam cut through the darkness, slicing across the waterlineâ
And stopped.
There were shapes.
They didnât move at first glance.
But they were there.
Half-submerged. Still. Waiting.
âInfected,â Lewis murmured.
âYeah,â Pierre replied.
Franco said nothing.
He was looking past them.
Further down.
âClear them,â he said quietly.
It was slow.
Messy.
Controlled, but never clean.
The infected in the water moved differentlyâsluggish but unpredictable, their limbs dragging through resistance, their reactions delayed but not absent. One lunged too late and got caught halfway up the steps before Oscar brought it down. Another dragged itself along the wall, fingers clawing uselessly at stone until Pierre ended it.
Lewis moved with precision, conserving energy, watching angles.
They worked together.
Efficient.
Silent.
Untilâ
A sound.
Different.
Not the erratic, mindless noise of the others.
Something softer.
Closer.
Franco stiffened.
ââŠThere,â he said.
Pierre followed his gaze.
And saw him.
Gabriel.
What was left of him.
It took a second to register.
Because it didnât look like a person anymore.
Not fully.
His body was twisted at an unnatural angle, one leg bent wrong beneath him, his movements uneven as he dragged himself slowly through the water toward the stairs. His clothes were torn, soaked dark, clinging to skin that didnât look like skin anymore.
And his faceâ
Pierre swallowed hard.
âJesus.â
Gabrielâs head lifted slightly at the sound.
His mouth opened.
A broken, guttural noise escaped.
He started pulling himself forward faster.
Toward them.
Toward Franco.
Pierre stepped forward instinctively.
Francoâs hand shot out, grabbing his arm.
âNo,â he said.
Pierre looked at him.
Really looked.
And understood.
ââŠWeâll hold the others,â Pierre said quietly.
Franco nodded.
Oscar and Lewis exchanged a glance, then moved without argument, stepping forward to intercept the remaining infected still shifting in the water, drawing their attention away.
Pierre hesitated for just a second longer.
Then he stepped back.
Leaving Franco alone at the top of the stairs.
Gabriel dragged himself up the first step.
Then the second.
Each movement slow. Labored. Wrong.
Water sloshed behind him, dripping from his clothes, his fingers scraping weakly against the wood as he climbed.
Franco didnât move.
Didnât speak.
Just watched.
Pierre turned away.
Not fully.
But enough.
Enough to give him something like privacy.
âHey.â
The word was soft.
Barely audible.
But it cut through everything.
Gabriel stilled.
Just for a second.
Like something inside him recognized it.
Franco took a slow step down.
Not close enough to touch.
Just⊠closer.
âIâm here,â he said, voice steadier than it had any right to be.
Gabriel made another sound.
Quieter this time.
Broken.
Francoâs throat tightened.
ââŠTe extraño,â he whispered.
The words slipped out like theyâd been waiting.
Like theyâd been sitting there too long.
Gabriel dragged himself forward another inch.
Francoâs hand trembled slightly at his side.
âYouâre okay,â he murmured. âIâve got you.â
It wasnât true.
None of it was true.
But it was all he had left to give.
ââŠMi mariposa,â he added softly.
The nickname sat heavy in the air.
Pierre closed his eyes briefly.
He hadnât meant to listen.
But he couldnât not hear it.
ââŠIâm sorry,â Franco said.
And thatâ
That broke something.
Because it wasnât just grief.
It was guilt.
Regret.
Everything he hadnât said.
Everything he hadnât done.
Everything that had ended too fast.
Gabrielâs hand reached the next step.
Then faltered.
Franco stepped down one more step.
Close enough now.
Close enough to end it.
He didnât rush.
Didnât look away.
His hand steadied.
ââŠI love you,â he said quietly.
And thenâ
He did what he had to.
The sound was small.
Compared to everything else theyâd heard.
But it echoed anyway.
Because of what it meant.
Because of who it was.
Pierre didnât turn back immediately.
He gave it a second.
Then another.
When he finally looked, Franco was still standing there.
Still.
Silent.
Gabriel wasnât moving anymore.
They didnât speak on the way back up.
Didnât need to.
Some things didnât require words.
The others were waiting outside.
Not watching the door.
Not directly.
But close enough.
Max straightened as they emerged. âDone?â
Pierre nodded.
Franco didnât say anything.
He just walked past them.
Straight to the Suburban.
No one stopped him.
Pierre hesitated for a second before following.
He caught up just before Franco reached the passenger side.
âHey,â he said quietly.
Franco paused.
Didnât turn.
Pierre shifted slightly, unsure how to start, which was rare for him.
âIââ he began, then stopped. âI know what thatâs like.â
Francoâs shoulders tensed.
Pierre kept going anyway.
âLosing someone like that,â he said. âIt doesnât⊠get easier. Not really.â
A beat.
Then, softer, âBut you donât have to carry it alone.â
Franco didnât respond.
Not verbally.
But after a secondâ
He nodded.
Once.
Small.
But real.
Pierre took that for what it was.
And left it there.
They loaded up again.
One vehicle.
Too many bodies with not enough space.
Max started the engine.
Didnât look back.
Didnât hesitate.
The farmhouse disappeared behind them.
And with itâ
Another piece of what theyâd lost.
The road out of the farmhouse didnât feel like leaving.
It felt like being pushed.
Like something unseen had taken hold of the back of the Suburban and was guiding them forward whether they were ready or not.
No one said anything for the first ten minutes.
Not because theyâd agreed to silence.
But because there was nothing left to say that wouldnât break something open again.
The Suburban rattled faintly as it picked up speed, tires crunching over gravel before finding the cracked remains of what had once been a proper road. Wind pushed against the sides of the vehicle in uneven bursts, rocking it just enough to be noticeable.
Bright afternoon light flooded the interior through dusty windows, harsh and unforgiving. It illuminated everythingâevery cut, every bruise, every hollow look that no one could quite hide anymore.
Max drove.
Hands steady.
Eyes forward.
Like if he focused hard enough on the road, everything else might fall into place behind him.
It wouldnât.
But he kept trying anyway.
Kosse, Texas didnât announce itself.
No sign.
No clear boundary.
Just⊠a change.
The trees thinned first, gradually giving way to wide, open stretches of land that seemed to stretch forever in every direction. The road cut through it like a scarâstraight, exposed, with nothing to hide behind and nowhere to run if something went wrong.
The wind picked up.
Stronger here.
Uninterrupted.
It carried sound in a way that felt unnatural.
Too far.
Too clearly.
Ollie noticed it first.
âDo you hear that?â he asked quietly.
Kimi tilted his head slightly. âWind.â
âNoânot just wind.â
They all listened.
At first, there was nothing but the constant rush of air against the car.
Thenâ
Faint.
Distant.
A sound that didnât belong.
A low, broken call.
Carried across the plains like it had nowhere else to go.
ââŠInfected,â Lewis said.
âFar,â Carlos added.
âYeah,â Max said. âBut not as far as it sounds.â
That was the problem.
Distance didnât mean safety out here.
Sound traveled.
And so did they.
They drove for another hour without seeing anything.
No buildings.
No cars.
No movement.
Just open land and sky and the constant, relentless wind.
It shouldâve felt peaceful.
It didnât.
It felt exposed.
Like they were the only thing left in a world that had forgotten how to hold people.
George shifted slightly in his cramped seat, trying and failing to find a position that didnât involve someone elseâs elbow in his ribs.
âThis is unbearable,â he muttered.
âYouâve said that five times,â Alex replied.
âAnd I mean it more each time.â
âShocking.â
George huffed quietly, then fell silent again.
Alex watched him for a second.
Then another.
âHey,â he said.
George didnât look over. âWhat?â
Alex hesitated.
Which, for him, was rare.
âYouâve been⊠off,â he said finally.
âIâm sitting in a car with fourteen other people. I think Iâm allowed to be off.â
âThatâs not what I mean.â
George exhaled through his nose. âThen what do you mean?â
Alex shifted slightly, lowering his voice. âI mean youâve been distant.â
That got a reaction.
George glanced at him briefly before looking away again. âIâm fine.â
âYouâre not.â
âI said Iâm fine.â
Alex frowned. âYouâre shutting people out.â
âIâm notââ
âYou are,â Alex cut in. âYou barely talk anymore unless someone asks you something directly, and even then itâs like youâre halfway somewhere else.â
Georgeâs jaw tightened.
âEverything is fine,â he said, more firmly this time.
Alex leaned back slightly, unconvinced. âRight.â
That was it.
Conversation over.
At least for now.
But the tension lingered.
Unresolved.
A few seats back, Lando nudged Oscar lightly with his shoulder.
âHey.â
Oscar hummed in response.
âYou okay?â
Oscar didnât answer immediately.
He stared out the window instead, watching the endless stretch of land roll by like it meant something.
âI donât know,â he said finally.
Lando shifted closerânot much space to move, but enough to be intentional. âThatâs fair.â
Oscar let out a quiet breath. âFeels like we donât get a second to catch up.â
âWe donât,â Lando said simply.
Another beat.
Then, softer, âYou know I love you, right?â
Oscar nodded faintly.
âYeah.â
In the back, Kimi adjusted slightly, wincing as someoneâs knee dug into his side.
âSorry,â Ollie said immediately.
âYouâve said that a lot today.â
âI mean it every time.â
Kimi huffed quietly. âI know.â
They sat in silence for a moment, the wind outside filling the gaps.
Then Ollie spoke again.
âIâm glad you listened to me,â he said, stopping himself briefly before continuing. âAbout not shaving, at least.â
Kimi glanced at him.
âI told you I wouldnât.â
Ollie scratched the back of his neck awkwardly. âGood.â
ââŠGood?â
âYeah. I meanââ Ollie stumbled slightly over his words. âIt looksâgood.â
Kimi raised an eyebrow.
Ollie immediately regretted everything.
âIâm just sayingâlikeâyou look less⊠dead.â
A pause.
Thenâ
Kimi snorted again.
It was quieter this time.
But it was there.
âIâll take that as a compliment,â he said.
âYou should.â
Another small silence.
Then Ollie leaned his head back against the seat, eyes closing briefly. âI was serious, though.â
âI know.â
ââŠAlright.â
Further forward, Liam shifted carefully, making sure Isack was still steady beside him.
He was.
Barely.
Isackâs breathing had evened out since the farmhouse, but there was still a tension in him that hadnât fully gone away. Like he was waiting for something else to happen.
Something worse.
âYou good?â Liam asked quietly.
Isack nodded.
Then shook his head.
Then sighed. âI donât know.â
Liam adjusted slightly, letting their shoulders press together more firmly. âThatâs becoming a theme.â
âYeah.â
A beat.
Then Isack spoke again.
ââŠDo you think we make it?â
Liam didnât answer right away.
Not because he didnât want to.
But because he didnât know how.
âI think we try,â he said finally.
Isack let out a weak laugh. âThatâs not the same thing.â
âNo,â Liam admitted. âBut itâs what weâve got.â
Isack leaned slightly into him.
Not much.
Just enough.
âOkay,â he said softly.
The road stretched on.
Unchanging.
Endless.
And thenâ
âStop,â Lewis said suddenly.
Max reacted immediately, easing off the accelerator.
âWhat?â
âListen.â
They did.
At first, nothing.
Thenâ
Closer this time.
Not one.
Several.
The sound carried across the open land, distorted by distance and wind but unmistakable now.
âInfected,â Carlos said.
âYeah,â Max replied. âBut where?â
That was the problem.
There was nowhere for them to hide.
No buildings.
No trees.
Just open plains and sound that moved faster than they could track.
âLeft,â George said suddenly.
Max turned his head slightly. âYou sure?â
Another call.
Louder.
Closer.
âLeft,â George repeated.
Max adjusted the wheel slightly, angling the Suburban just enough to create distance.
âDonât stop,â Lewis added. âWe keep moving.â
Shapes appeared on the horizon.
Small at first.
Then clearer.
Figures moving unevenly through the tall grass, drawn by the sound of the engine.
âKeep your speed steady,â Carlos said.
âNot too fast, not too slow.â
Max nodded.
The infected adjusted their path.
Intercepting.
Anticipating.
âTheyâre tracking the sound,â Ollie said.
âYeah,â Kimi replied. âSo we make it harder.â
Max veered slightly to the right, then corrected.
The engine noise shifted direction.
The infected faltered.
Just slightly.
âGood,â Lewis said. âAgain.â
Max did it again.
And again.
Small adjustments.
Subtle changes.
Enough to throw them off just long enough to pass.
The infected stumbled after them.
But they were too slow.
Too far.
Eventuallyâ
They disappeared behind them.
The sound faded.
And the road opened up again.
No one spoke for a moment.
Thenâ
ââŠOkay,â Alex said. âThat was terrifying.â
âEffective,â Carlos corrected.
âStill terrifying.â
Max exhaled slowly. âWe can use that.â
âSound manipulation,â George added.
âDidnât think thatâd be a skill we needed.â
âWelcome to the apocalypse,â Alex muttered.
The sun started to dip.
Slowly.
Almost imperceptibly at first.
But enough.
The light shifted from harsh white to something warmer.
Darker.
Long shadows stretched across the plains, turning the open land into something more ominous.
Something less forgiving.
And stillâ
They hadnât seen another person.
Not one.
The isolation settled in heavier with every passing mile.
No one else in the world.
Thatâs what it felt like.
Even if it wasnât true.
Carlos leaned his head back slightly, eyes closing for just a second.
âYou ever think about what happens if we mess up?â Alex asked quietly from beside him.
Carlos opened one eye. âAll the time.â
Alex nodded faintly. âGood. Not just me, then.â
A pause.
Then, softer, âI keep thinking Iâm going to be the reason something goes wrong.â
Carlos didnât respond immediately.
Then he turned his head slightly.
âYou wonât be.â
âYou donât know that.â
âNo,â Carlos admitted. âBut I know this isnât on one person.â
Alex let out a slow breath. âDoesnât feel that way.â
Carlos studied him for a second.
Then said, âThatâs because you care.â
Alex blinked.
Carlos looked away again. âItâs not a weakness.â
Another pause.
Thenâ
ââŠThanks,â Alex said quietly.
Carlos nodded once.
Oscar shifted in the back, trying to find a position that didnât make his leg go numb. âWeâre gonna fuse together if we stay like this,â he muttered.
âThen stop moving,â Lando replied from somewhere near the center, not opening his eyes. âYouâre making it worse.â
âI physically cannot stop moving,â Oscar shot back. âThereâs a knee in my spine.â
âThatâs mine,â Kimi said calmly.
Oscar twisted slightly. âCan you⊠un-knee me?â
âNo.â
A few quiet laughs broke through the tensionâbrief, but enough to loosen something.
Pierre finally spoke.
âFranco.â
Franco didnât look at him. âYeah.â
Pierre hesitated, choosing his words carefully. âBack there⊠Gabriel.â
The name hung in the air for a second too long.
Francoâs grip on the door tightened, then relaxed again. âWhat about him?â
âI heard you,â Pierre said softly. âNot all of it. But enough.â
Franco exhaled slowly through his nose. Outside, the land rolled endlessly, empty except for skeletal fence posts and the occasional broken structure in the distance.
âHe was⊠important,â Pierre added. âI can tell.â
Franco let out a short, humorless breath. âThat obvious?â
Pierre nodded, even though Franco wasnât looking. âYeah.â
Silence returned, but it felt different nowâless suffocating, more expectant.
Franco swallowed. âWe used to joke about stupid things,â he said after a moment. âLittle names. Dumb stuff couples do.â His voice dipped slightly, softer. âHe hated most of them. Said they were embarrassing.â
Pierre allowed a faint smile. âBut not that one.â
Franco shook his head. âNo. Not that one.â
The Suburban hit a small bump, jostling everyone inside.
âWhat did it mean?â Pierre asked.
Franco hesitated again, like the answer carried weight. âNothing special,â he said quietly. âJust⊠something that stuck. He liked butterflies. Said they looked fragile, but they werenât. Survived things they shouldnât.â He paused. âI guess I thought⊠he was like that.â
Pierre didnât respond right away. He looked out at the endless plains, wind sweeping across them in visible waves.
âI get it,â he said eventually. âLosing someone like that.â
Franco finally glanced at him, just for a second. There was something unguarded in his expression, something raw that hadnât been there before.
Pierre added, âThe name doesnât matter. Itâs what it means to you.â
Franco nodded once, then looked back at the road. âYeah.â
Behind them, conversation sparked again in quieter clusters.
Lando leaned back as much as the cramped space allowed. âIf we donât find somewhere bigger soon, Iâm voting we throw someone out.â
âPick carefully,â Oscar said. âWeâll remember.â
âIâm thinking you,â Lando replied.
âUnbelievable.â
Kimi, still calm, added, âStatistically, removing one person would improve comfort by approximatelyââ
âDonât,â Oscar cut him off. âDonât bring math into this.â
A small ripple of amusement moved through the group.
Night approached slowly, and with it came a different kind of tension.
Every sound felt amplified in the darknessâthe hum of the engine, the shifting of bodies, the faint creak of metal. Outside, movement was harder to see, easier to imagine.
All characters and real people depicted are fictionalized for storytelling purposes. No harm or offense is intended. Content may include mature themesâreader discretion advised.
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Okay I need to know something and I need honesty. Who do you guys think is going to die next in PLOTD?
Not who you donât want to die⊠who you genuinely think is on borrowed time right now. Iâm not going to be confirming or denying anything, but I will be watching!
Vote in the poll below and feel free to explain your reasoning in the comments because Iâm nosy and I want to see the thought process!
Summary: In the uneasy calm after tragedy, a simple discovery in a decaying barn spirals into chaotic attempts at normalcy, as the group clings to fleeting moments of humor and humanity. But even laughter echoes differently now, shadowed by grief and the quiet understanding that nothingânot even a showerâcomes without risk.
Warnings: Grief Aftermath, References to Death, Crude Humor, Mild Language
Word Count: 1.7k+
Prev. Chapter Next Chapter
Oct 24, 2025, 11:00 AM
The morning after Gabriel died felt wrong in a way none of them could quite explain.
It wasnât quieterâif anything, the farmhouse creaked and groaned just as much as it had the night beforeâbut something underneath the noise had shifted. The kind of shift you couldnât point at, couldnât name, but could feel sitting heavy in your chest like damp air before a storm.
No one went near the basement door.
Not even by accident.
They moved around it instinctively, like it had become part of the structure itselfâsomething dangerous and permanent and better left alone.
Still, morning came anyway.
And with it, the uncomfortable reality that they were still alive.
Which meant they had to keep moving.
Eventually.
Just⊠not yet.
George was the one who broke first.
Not emotionally. Not dramatically.
Just⊠practically.
âWe should check the surroundings,â he said, standing near one of the windows and peering out at the overgrown field beyond. âBarn, perimeter, anything useful we missed yesterday.â
Max didnât respond right away. He sat at the table, elbows braced, staring at nothing in particular like he hadnât fully come back from somewhere else yet.
George glanced over at him. âMax.â
A beat.
Then Max blinked, like surfacing.
âYeah,â he said, pushing himself up. âYeah. Barn.â
No one volunteered to join them.
No one stopped them either.
So they went.
The barn stood about fifty yards from the farmhouse, half-hidden behind a crooked fence and a line of dying trees that rattled softly in the breeze. It leaned slightly to one side, roof sagging just enough to be concerning but not enough to have fully given up.
âCharming,â George muttered.
Max nudged the door open with his foot.
It creaked loudly, because of course it did.
They both froze.
Waited.
Nothing lunged at them.
No sudden movement. No guttural noises from the shadows.
Just dust drifting lazily through shafts of pale light.
âClear,â Max said quietly.
âClear,â George echoed.
Inside, the barn was mostly emptyâold tools scattered across the walls, a broken workbench, a few rusted containers that might have once held something useful. It smelled like mildew and dry rot, layered over something faintly metallic.
George kicked at a loose plank on the ground. âNot exactly a goldmine.â
Max shrugged, already moving deeper inside. âStill worth checking.â
They split up without needing to say it.
Max headed toward the back, scanning shelves and crates, while George drifted toward the side wall where a collapsed ladder leaned awkwardly against a support beam.
âHey,â George called after a minute.
Max glanced over. âWhat?â
George pointed toward the far corner. âThat wasnât there yesterday.â
Max followed his gaze.
A shape, partially obscured by shadow.
Round.
Low.
ââŠThatâs a well,â Max said.
George blinked. âInside the barn?â
Max stepped closer, boots crunching softly on debris. âLooks like it.â
George followed, curiosity overriding caution just enough to be dangerous.
The well was oldâstone lining chipped and uneven, a wooden beam overhead with a rusted pulley system that mightâve once worked. The rope hanging from it looked like it would disintegrate if you breathed on it too hard.
Max leaned over slightly, peering into the darkness below.
George immediately grabbed the back of his jacket. âAbsolutely not.â
âIâm just looking.â
âYouâre going to fall in and die, and Iâm not explaining that to the others.â
âIâm not going toââ
The rope creaked.
Both of them froze.
Very slowly, Max straightened.
ââŠOkay,â he admitted. âThatâs fair.â
George exhaled. âThank you.â
They stood there for a second, staring at the well like it might do something if they looked away.
âThink thereâs anything in it?â George asked.
Max shrugged. âWater. Hopefully just water.â
ââŠDefine âjust water.ââ
Max didnât answer.
Which was answer enough.
By the time they got back to the farmhouse, they had a problem.
A very specific problem.
One that spread faster than infection ever could.
âThereâs a well,â George announced.
That was all it took.
âWhat do you mean, a well?â Alex demanded, already halfway out the door.
âIn the barn,â George said.
âIs there water in it?â
âProbably.â
âDefine probablyââ
âI did not climb inside the well to verify, Alex.â
âYou should have.â
âDo you want me dead?â
Within seconds, the entire group had migrated toward the barn like it was the most exciting thing theyâd encountered in weeksâwhich, to be fair, it kind of was.
Even Franco came.
He didnât say anything, didnât react outwardly, but he followed.
That was something.
They gathered around the well in a loose, uneven circle, all of them staring down into it like it might reveal the meaning of life if they waited long enough.
ââŠI canât see anything,â Ollie said.
âThatâs because itâs dark,â Isack replied.
âThank you, Isack. Very insightful.â
Kimi crouched slightly, squinting. âThereâs water.â
âHow do you know?â Ollie asked.
âI can hear it.â
They all went quiet.
And thenâ
Faint.
Distant.
A soft, almost imperceptible drip.
ââŠOkay, yeah,â Alex admitted. âThatâs water.â
âOr something pretending to be water,â Esteban added.
Everyone paused.
ââŠWhy would you say that?â Ollie asked, turning to look at Esteban.
Esteban shrugged. âJust covering all possibilities.â
âPlease stop covering possibilities.â
Max pinched the bridge of his nose. âWeâre not drinking straight out of it.â
âNo one said we were,â Carlos replied.
A beat.
ââŠWe were all thinking it,â Alex admitted.
âAbsolutely not,â Lewis said.
âAbsolutely yes,â George countered.
âFocus,â Max snapped. âWe can use it. Carefully.â
âFor what?â Ollie asked.
Max gestured vaguely. âCleaning. Washing. Something that doesnât involve drinking it and dying.â
That shifted the energy.
Noticeably.
Because suddenlyâ
They all realized something.
At the same time.
ââŠWe could shower,â Alex said slowly.
The silence that followed was deafening.
Then chaos.
âI CALL FIRSTââ
âNOââ
âWE NEED A SYSTEMââ
âThere is no systemââ
âThere is nowââ
Within minutes, the barn had turned into a full-scale argument zone.
âAbsolutely not, we are not doing a free-for-all,â Carlos said, trying and failing to impose order. âWe need a rotationââ
âRotation?â Ollie repeated. âWhat is this, a spa?â
âYes,â Alex cut in. âExactly that. A very exclusive, extremely limited spa.â
Max stared at them like they had all collectively lost their minds.
Which, to be fair, they had.
âGuys,â he said. âThis is notââ
âWe havenât showered in days,â George interrupted.
ââŠThatâs not the point.â
âIt is exactly the point.â
Lewis crossed his arms. âWeâre doing it. The question is how.â
And just like thatâ
It became a project.
The setup was⊠questionable.
At best.
They found a dented metal bucket in the barn, punched holes into the bottom with a screwdriver and a rock (a process that took far longer than anyone wanted to admit), and rigged it up to the old pulley system above the well.
The tarp came from the Suburbanâone of the many things theyâd shoved in without thinking.
âPrivacy,â Alex declared, holding it up like a prize.
âBarely,â Pierre muttered.
âItâs symbolic privacy.â
âThatâs not how privacy works.â
âIt is now.â
They strung the tarp between two beams, creating a makeshift enclosure that swayed slightly with every gust of wind.
âItâs perfect,â Ollie said.
âItâs a disaster,â Carlos corrected.
âSame thing.â
Max stepped back, looking at the entire contraption with visible skepticism. âThis is going to collapse.â
âItâs fine,â Alex said.
âItâs not fine.â
âItâs mostly fine.â
âThatâs not reassuring.â
âItâs all weâve got.â
Max opened his mouth.
Closed it.
Then sighed.
âFive minutes each,â he said. âNo exceptions.â
George turned to look at Alex, absolutely exasperated. âQuit bothering people and get ready. Youâre next after Kimi.â
Alex turned to grab a towel, but not before giving Ollie a wink.
Even Franco eventually took a turn.
No one commented on it.
No one made it a big deal.
But they noticed.
The way he moved slower. The way he didnât look at anyone as he stepped behind the tarp. The way he stayed just under the five-minute limit, like he didnât want to take up more space than necessary.
When he came out, his hair was damp, clinging to his forehead.
He still didnât say anything.
But he looked a little more present.
By the time everyone was done, the barn looked like a war zone.
Water everywhere. Mud churned into the ground. The tarp half-falling off one side.
Butâ
They were cleaner.
Lighter.
âAlright,â Lewis said, clapping his hands once. âBack to work.â
Groans echoed immediately.
âYou said we could rest,â Ollie complained.
âI said we could shower.â
âSame difference.â
âNot even close.â
Reluctantly, they filed back toward the farmhouse, the brief moment of chaos fading into something quieter.
Something steadier.
They moved through the house again, checking rooms, gathering supplies, packing what little they had left into manageable bundles.
All characters and real people depicted are fictionalized for storytelling purposes. No harm or offense is intended. Content may include mature themesâreader discretion advised.
Summary: Isack Hadjar insistsârepeatedly, stubbornly, and very loudlyâthat he does not like Liam Lawson. Unfortunately, everyone around him seems determined to prove him wrongâusing his own behavior as evidence.
Pairing(s): Liam Lawson x Isack Hadjar
Warnings: Emotional Repression, Denial of Feelings, Mild Swearing, Yearning Idiots, Team Tension, Post-Argument Pining
Word Count: 1.5k+
Isack doesnât like Liam Lawson.
This is a fact.
A well-established, frequently stated, aggressively defended fact.
âDonât like him,â Isack says, arms crossed, leaning back in the Red Bull garage like this is a completely normal conversation to be having at nine in the morning. âNever have.â
Max doesnât even look up from his phone.
âRight,â he says.
Isack narrows his eyes. âYou donât believe me.â
Max scrolls. âI didnât say that.â
âYou didnât have to.â
Max hums. âYouâve mentioned him six times in the last ten minutes.â
âI have not.â
âYou have.â
âI was making a point.â
âAbout how much you donât like him.â
âYes.â
Max finally looks up.
ââŠYou talk about people you donât like that much?â
Isack opens his mouth.
Closes it.
ââŠHeâs just annoying,â he settles on.
Max nods, like that makes perfect sense. âMm.â
Isack squints. âWhat does that mean?â
âIt means,â Max says, going back to his phone, âyou should probably go focus on FP3 instead of thinking about him.â
âIâm not thinking about him.â
Max doesnât respond.
Which is worse.
Heâs not thinking about Liam.
Heâs justâ
Aware.
Of where the VCARB garage is.
Of when Liam walks past.
Of the fact that he hasnât walked past yet, which isâ
Irrelevant.
Completely irrelevant.
Isack pulls his gloves tighter, jaw set.
âStop hovering,â a voice says behind him.
He turns.
Oscar stands there, calm as ever, like he hasnât just appeared out of nowhere.
âIâm not hovering,â Isack says.
Oscar glancesânot subtlyâtoward the edge of the garage, where the VCARB side is just barely visible.
Then back at Isack.
âYou are,â he says.
âIâm not.â
âYouâre waiting.â
âIâm not waiting.â
Oscar tilts his head slightly. âFor someone who doesnât like him, you spend a lot of time checking if heâs around.â
Isack scoffs. âIâm not checking.â
âYou looked three times in the last minute.â
Isack freezes.
ââŠYouâre exaggerating.â
âIâm not.â
Silence.
Oscar watches him for a second longer.
Thenâ
âYou miss him,â Oscar says, like heâs commenting on the weather.
Isack laughs.
Actually laughs.
âYeah,â he says flatly. âThatâs it. I miss him. Thatâs why I think heâs insufferable.â
Oscar shrugs. âBoth can be true.â
âNo, they canât.â
âThey can.â
âThey canât.â
Oscar considers that.
Then nods slowly. âOkay.â
Isack frowns. âOkay?â
âOkay,â Oscar repeats. âYou donât like him.â
âExactly.â
Oscar glances over his shoulder.
Then back.
âHeâs here, by the way.â
Isackâs head snaps up before he can stop himself.
Oscarâs mouth twitches.
ââŠYouâre unbelievable,â Isack mutters.
Oscar just walks away.
FP3 is fine.
Good, even.
Isack puts in clean laps, keeps it tight, doesnât overpush.
He doesnât think about Liam.
Not when he sees a flash of blue and white on track.
Not when he hears his name over the radio in the same breath as Liamâs during timing updates.
Not when he catches sight of him climbing out of the car across the paddock afterward.
Not once.
Not at all.
Heâs focused.
Professional.
Completely unaffected.
âMate.â
Arvid is grinning at him like he knows something.
Which, immediatelyâ
Isack doesnât like.
âWhat?â Isack says.
Arvid leans against the barrier, casual. âYouâve got a minute?â
âNo.â
âCool,â Arvid says, ignoring that completely. âSoâLiam.â
Isack groans. âOh my god.â
âWhat?â
âI donâtââ Isack gestures vaguely. âWhy does everyone keep bringing him up?â
Arvid raises an eyebrow. âBecause you keep reacting like that.â
âIâm not reacting.â
âYou are.â
âIâm not.â
Arvid smiles, slow and knowing. âYou are.â
Isack glares. âSay whatever you came here to say.â
Arvid shrugs. âJust thought you should know he asked about you.â
Isackâs stomach does something deeply unhelpful.
ââŠWhy?â
Arvid watches him carefully.
âBecause he cares?â he offers.
Isack scoffs. âDoubt it.â
âRight,â Arvid says. âThatâs why he wanted to know how you were settling in. Totally doesnât care.â
Isack hesitates.
Just for a second.
ââŠThatâs normal,â he says. âWe used to be teammates.â
âYeah,â Arvid agrees easily. âUsed to.â
Thereâs something in the way he says it.
Like heâs waiting.
Isack looks away first.
ââŠDoesnât mean anything,â he mutters.
Arvid hums. âSure.â
Thenâ
âHe still looks for you, you know.â
Thatâ
That makes Isack look back.
âWhat?â
Arvid shrugs. âIn the paddock. Garage. Wherever. Not obvious, butâŠâ He tilts his head. âYou notice things like that when youâre around someone a lot.â
Isackâs chest feels tight.
Annoyingly so.
ââŠYouâre making that up.â
âIâm not.â
Silence.
Arvid pushes off the barrier.
âAnyway,â he says lightly. âGood luck in quali.â
Then he leaves.
And Isack is left standing thereâ
Thinking about things he absolutely does not want to be thinking about.
By the time qualifying rolls around, Isack is irritated.
Not at anything specific.
Justâ
In general.
At everyone.
At himself.
At the fact that Liam is currently P-something and that Isack knows that without even checking.
âStill donât like him?â
Isack doesnât turn this time.
He recognizes the voice immediately.
Lewis steps up beside him, easy, observant in that way that makes people feel like theyâve already been read.
âNope,â Isack says.
Lewis hums. âInteresting.â
Isack exhales. âYou too?â
âJust curious,â Lewis says. âYouâve got a lot of energy for someone you donât care about.â
âI donât care.â
Lewis smiles slightly. âRight.â
Isack presses his lips together.
âYou ever notice,â Lewis continues, âhow the things weâre loudest about are usually the ones weâre trying hardest to convince ourselves of?â
Isack glares. âThat sounds like something you say to be annoying.â
Lewis laughs quietly. âSometimes.â
A pause.
Thenâ
âYou donât have to make it complicated,â Lewis adds.
Isack frowns. âIâm not.â
âYou are.â
âIâm not.â
Lewis glances at him.
Kind.
Too kind.
âYou miss him,â he says.
Isack looks away.
Doesnât answer.
Becauseâ
Heâs heard that already.
Too many times today.
And itâs starting to sound less like a joke.
He sees Liam properly for the first time that evening.
After quali.
In the paddock.
Itâs accidental.
Orâ
He tells himself it is.
They round the same corner at the same time.
Almost collide.
Stop short.
And for a secondâ
Itâs just them.
No teammates.
No noise.
No buffer.
Liam looks the same.
Maybe a little more tired.
Maybe a little more careful.
But the same.
âHey,â Liam says.
Simple.
Easy.
Like nothingâs wrong.
Like everything is.
Isack swallows.
âHey.â
A beat.
âHowâs Red Bull?â Liam asks.
âFine.â
âYeah?â
âYeah.â
Silence.
God, this is painful.
They used to be easy.
Used to beâ
Not this.
âYou look good out there,â Liam says after a moment.
Isack blinks. âYou too.â
Another pause.
Thenâ
âYouâve been avoiding me,â Liam says.
Straightforward.
No edge.
Just⊠true.
Isack scoffs automatically. âI havenât.â
Liam raises an eyebrow.
And yeahâ
Okay.
Maybe he has.
ââŠBusy,â Isack amends.
Liam nods slowly.
âRight.â
That silence again.
Thick.
Heavy.
Familiar in the worst way.
âYou couldâve said something,â Liam says.
Isack frowns. âAbout what?â
âAbout leaving,â Liam says.
Oh.
That.
Isack looks away.
âI didnât think it mattered.â
Liam lets out a quiet, disbelieving breath.
âYeah,â he says. âThat tracks.â
Something in Isackâs chest twists.
âThatâs notââ
âIsnât it?â Liam cuts in, still calm but tighter now. âBecause from where I was standing, it looked a lot like you just⊠didnât care.â
âI did,â Isack says immediately.
Too fast.
Too sharp.
Liam stills.
ââŠRight,â he says quietly.
Isack exhales, frustrated.
âNo, Iââ He stops, runs a hand through his hair. âI just didnât know how to say it.â
âSay what?â
And there it is.
The thing.
The whole thing.
Isack looks at him.
Really looks.
And godâ
Heâs missed him.
Thatâs the worst part.
The stupidest part.
ââŠThat I didnât want it to end like that,â Isack says finally.
Liamâs expression shifts.
Softens.
Just a little.
âIt didnât have to,â he says.
âI know,â Isack mutters. âI justââ
He cuts himself off.
Shakes his head.
âThis is stupid.â
Liam huffs a quiet laugh. âYeah.â
A pause.
Thenâ
âYou talk big for someone who cares this much,â Liam says.
Isack freezes.
ââŠWhat?â
Liamâs mouth twitches.
âYou heard me.â
Isack stares at him.
Becauseâ
Of course.
Of course Liam would be the one to say it.
After a whole day of everyone else circling it.
He exhales slowly.
Thenâ
ââŠI donât like you,â he says.
Liam snorts.
âSure.â
âI donât.â
âOkay.â
âI donât.â
âIsack.â
âWhat?â
Liam steps closer.
Not much.
Just enough.
âYou showed up to our garage three times this week,â he says. âYou think I didnât notice?â
Isackâs face heats. âI had reasons.â
âYeah?â
âYes.â
Liam nods. âIâm sure you did.â
Isack huffs.
Thenâ
Quieterâ
ââŠI missed you.â
There.
Said.
Finally.
Liam stills.
Completely.
ââŠYeah?â he asks.
Isack nods, just once.
âYeah.â
A beat.
Thenâ
âMe too,â Liam says.
And just like thatâ
Everything settles.
Not fixed.
Not perfect.
Butâ
Right.
Isack lets out a breath he didnât realize heâd been holding.
All characters and real people depicted are fictionalized for storytelling purposes. No harm or offense is intended. Content may include mature themesâreader discretion advised.
Summary: After a desperate attempt to cross the Black Bridge ends in catastrophe, the group is forced to accept that there is no clean path northâand nowhere in the world is safe from what is coming. Seeking shelter at a remote farmhouse, they barely survive the night before another loss in its flooded basement shatters what remains of their fragile stability.
At first, it was just a shape in the fogâsomething darker than the rest of the world, something too straight, too deliberate to be natural. The heavy morning mist still hadnât burned off, clinging low over the riverbanks and swallowing distance whole. What should have been visible from miles away only revealed itself in fragments: a rusted railing here, the skeletal outline of a light post there.
Then, as they crested a shallow incline, it emerged all at once.
The Black Bridge.
Even without the warning, without the dying womanâs voice echoing in their heads, they wouldâve known something about it was wrong.
It wasnât just abandoned.
It was choked.
Cars littered the span in chaotic clustersâsome angled sideways like theyâd tried to turn around too late, others crushed nose-to-tail in desperate attempts to escape. Doors hung open. Windshields were shattered. A semi truck sat jackknifed across two lanes near the center, its trailer split open like something had clawed its way out.
And between it allâ
Movement.
Slow. Unsteady. Endless.
âInfected,â Alex muttered from the back of the Suburban, though no one needed the confirmation.
There were hundreds.
Maybe more.
They wandered between the cars, bumped into one another, dragged themselves along the concrete. Some were caught in loops, pacing the same few feet over and over again. Others leaned against vehicles as if theyâd simply stopped mid-escape and never started again.
And below the bridgeâ
The river churned, swollen and fast from recent storms, its surface broken by debris and something darker that none of them wanted to look at too closely.
Max slowed the Suburban to a stop a safe distance away. Behind him, Lando did the same with the Ram.
For a moment, no one spoke.
Then, quietly, through the walkie:
âWell,â Lando said. âThatâs⊠bad.â
âThatâs not crossable,â Pierre added flatly.
âNo,â Carlos agreed. âNot like this.â
Silence stretched again, heavier this time.
They had come all this way for this.
Lewis leaned forward slightly from the middle row, eyes scanning the structure. âWhat about underneath?â
Max didnât respond immediately. His gaze tracked along the side of the bridge, where the concrete supports descended toward the riverbank.
A narrow maintenance path. Steel beams. Structural supports crisscrossing beneath the main span.
Close.
Dangerously close.
ââŠItâs possible,â Max said finally.
A beat.
âThatâs insane,â Charles said.
Max glanced at him. âYou have a better idea?â
Charles opened his mouthâthen stopped.
Because he didnât.
None of them did.
Behind them, in the truck, the conversation mirrored itself.
âYouâre joking,â Ollie said, staring at the underside of the bridge. âYou want to go under that? Thatâs likeââ he gestured vaguely, ââa horror movie.â
Kimi didnât disagree.
But he also didnât look away.
âItâs quieter,â he said. âLess visible.â
âLess visible to what?â Ollie shot back. âThere are literally hundreds of them above us.â
âAnd fewer below,â Kimi replied.
That was the problem.
Fewer didnât mean none.
Liam shifted his weight in the truck bed, eyes locked on the structure. âIf it collapsesââ
âIt hasnât yet,â Franco interrupted, though his voice lacked conviction.
Isack said nothing.
He was staring at the water.
At the way it moved.
At the way things seemed to drift just beneath the surface.
âNo,â Lando said suddenly, louder than before. âNo, weâre not doing that.â
Every head in the truck turned toward him.
âThatâs suicide,â he continued. âWe find another way.â
âThere is no other way,â Maxâs voice came through the walkie, sharp and immediate. âWe turn around, we lose hours. Maybe days. We burn fuel we donât have.â
âAnd we die if that thing comes down on us,â Lando shot back.
âOr we die out here,â Max countered. âPick one.â
The argument hung there, raw and unresolved.
Thenâ
âWe go under,â Lewis said.
Quiet.
Decisive.
Final.
Max didnât argue.
Neither did Carlos.
And after a momentâ
Neither did Lando.
They parked off the road, hidden as best they could behind a cluster of overgrown brush and a collapsed sign.
No engines.
No unnecessary noise.
Everything they didnât need stayed behind.
Everything they couldnât afford to lose came with them.
Weapons were checked. Straps tightened. Sleeves pulled down over shaking hands.
âStay close,â Carlos said. âNo sudden movements. No yelling unless you absolutely have to.â
âThatâs reassuring,â Ollie muttered.
Kimi bumped his shoulder lightly. âYouâll be fine.â
Ollie gave him a look. âThat is statistically unlikely.â
But he stuck close anyway.
They approached the bridge from the side, moving down the sloped embankment toward the supports. The ground was damp, soft underfoot, and more than once someone slipped slightly before catching themselves.
The closer they got, the louder it became.
Not loud in the way of a horde charging.
But constant.
A low, unending chorus of movement and decay filtering down from above. The scrape of shoes on concrete. The hollow thud of bodies bumping into metal. The occasional, wet, choking sound that none of them wanted to identify.
âDonât look up,â George said quietly.
Of course, that made it impossible not to.
Through the gaps in the structure, they could see them.
Feet.
Legs.
Shadows shifting overhead.
So many of them.
âJesus,â Alex whispered.
âKeep moving,â Max said.
They reached the first beam.
It was narrower than it looked from a distance.
Of course it was.
Steel, slick with condensation, stretching out beneath the bridge like a thin, unforgiving path. Below it, the river rushed past, fast and cold and full of things they couldnât see clearly enough.
âNope,â Ollie said immediately. âNo, absolutely not.â
Kimi stepped onto it.
Ollie stared at him. âYouâve got to be kidding me.â
Kimi glanced back. âYou coming?â
Ollie hesitatedâ
Then followed.
Because what else was he going to do?
One by one, they moved onto the beams.
Slow.
Careful.
Every step placed with deliberate precision.
Above them, the infected shifted.
A few sounds changedâsubtle, but enough to make everyone freeze.
âDid they hear that?â Isack whispered.
âKeep moving,â Liam murmured.
The beam vibrated faintly under their combined weight.
Or maybe that was just in their heads.
The river below surged louder, the current slamming against the supports with a force that made the entire structure feel⊠unstable.
Alive, almost.
Wrong.
Halfway to the first support column, Ollieâs foot slipped.
âShitââ
His arms windmilled for balance, body tipping sidewaysâ
Kimi grabbed him instantly, fingers locking around his sleeve and yanking him back upright.
For a second, they just stood there, breathing hard.
âOkay,â Ollie said faintly. âOkay. That almostâyeah, I almost died.â
âYou didnât,â Kimi said.
âGreat. Fantastic. Love that for me.â
Despite everythingâ
Kimi huffed a quiet laugh.
It was brief.
Fragile.
But it was something.
Behind them, Liam kept a closer eye on Isack, who hadnât taken his gaze off the water.
âYou good?â Liam asked softly.
Isack nodded quickly.
Too quickly.
âYeah. Fine.â
He wasnât.
But they didnât have time for that.
Not here.
Not now.
âStay with me,â Liam said anyway.
Isack glanced at him, something tight in his expressionâ
Then nodded again.
âYeah.â
They kept moving.
Step by step.
Toward the center of the bridge.
Toward something none of them trusted.
And somewhere above themâ
Something shifted.
Louder this time.
A metal groan, deep and resonant, echoing through the structure like a warning.
Everyone froze.
âWhat was that?â Esteban whispered.
No one answered.
Because they all knew.
And none of them wanted to say it out loud.
The sound didnât stop.
That was the worst part.
It wasnât just a single groan of stressed metal that faded into silence, something they could pretend hadnât happened. It lingeredâlow and aching, vibrating through the beams beneath their feet and up into their bones.
Everyone stood frozen, balanced precariously above the rushing water.
âKeep moving,â Max said, quieter now but more urgent. âSlow. Donât rush.â
âDonât rush?â Ollie whispered hoarsely. âThe bridge is literallyââ
âMove,â Carlos cut in.
That did it.
They moved.
Not fasterâif anything, more carefullyâbut with a tension now that hadnât been there before. Every step felt like it mattered more. Every shift of weight carried consequence.
Above them, the infected reacted to the vibration.
A few stumbled closer to the edges of the bridge, their uncoordinated movements sending small bits of debris trickling down through the gaps. Dust. Rust flakes. Something wetter that no one wanted to identify.
Isack flinched as something landed on his sleeve.
âDonât look,â Liam murmured immediately.
Too late.
Isack wiped it off quickly, jaw tightening, breathing starting to come a little too fast.
âHey,â Liam said softly, adjusting his pace to stay directly beside him. âStay with me, yeah? Justâfocus on your steps.â
âI am,â Isack said, but it came out thin.
They kept moving.
The first support column loomed aheadâthick concrete rising from the river like a temporary promise of stability.
âOnce we reach that, we canââ Alex started.
A shout cut him off.
Behind them.
âWaitâ!â
It was Franco.
Everyone turned instinctively.
Too fast.
The beam shifted under the sudden, uneven movement.
âDonâtâ!â George snapped, but the warning came too late.
Liamâs foot slipped.
It happened in a fraction of a secondâone misstep, one patch of slick metalâand suddenly he wasnât standing anymore.
He dropped.
A sharp intake of breath, a flash of movementâ
And then he was hanging.
One hand barely caught the edge of the beam, the other scrambling for purchase as his body swung out over the river below.
âLiam!â Isackâs voice cracked, panic immediate and raw.
The current roared beneath him, loud and violent, close enough that if he fell, there would be no getting him back.
âDonât move!â Max barked, already shifting carefully back along the beam.
Liamâs grip slipped slightly.
âFuckââ
His fingers tightened, knuckles going white as he fought to hold on. His boots scraped uselessly against empty air, searching for something that wasnât there.
âIâve got youââ someone startedâ
But they didnât.
Not yet.
Kimi moved first.
He didnât hesitate. Didnât think. He dropped down onto the beam, lowering his center of gravity as he edged closer, one hand braced behind him for balance.
âKimiââ Ollieâs voice was tight with fear.
âItâs fine,â Kimi said, though it very clearly wasnât.
He reached Liam.
For a second, it looked impossibleâLiam hanging too far down, Kimi stretched too thinâbut then Kimi lunged forward just enough to grab his wrist.
âGot you,â Kimi said, breath sharp.
Liam let out a strained laugh that didnât sound like humor at all. âThatâsâgreatâplease donât drop me.â
âNot planning to.â
âGoodâgood planââ
âShut up and hold on.â
Kimi tightened his grip, bracing his feet harder against the beam. âOn three,â he said. âYouâre going to kick up, okay?â
Liam nodded once, jaw clenched.
âOneââ
Above them, the bridge groaned again.
Louder.
Closer.
âTwoââ
The metal beneath their feet vibrated.
âThree.â
Liam kicked.
Kimi pulled.
For one terrifying second, it felt like neither would be enoughâ
Then Liamâs arm cleared the edge, his chest slamming hard against the beam as Kimi hauled him the rest of the way up.
They collapsed there for half a second, breathing hard, bodies pressed flat against the cold metal.
âOkay,â Ollie said faintly. âOkay, that wasâhorrible.â
âYouâre fine,â Kimi said, though his own breathing was uneven now.
Liam nodded, pushing himself up carefully. âYeah. Yeah, Iâmââ
He stopped.
Because the sound was getting worse.
Not just a groan now.
A crack.
Deep. Splitting. Structural.
Maxâs head snapped upward. âWe need to go. Now.â
They moved faster.
Careful stillâbut urgency had taken over now, overriding the slow precision from before. The beam rattled beneath them with every step, the vibrations no longer subtle.
Above, the infected were reacting more noticeably now.
Some were drawn to the edges, clustering where the noise was strongest. A few stumbled too far, slipping between gaps in the broken railingâ
And falling.
Bodies hit the water below with heavy splashes, immediately swallowed by the current.
Isack made a strangled sound.
âDonât look,â Liam said again, more firmly this time.
But Isack had already seen.
The way they moved even after hitting the water.
The way they didnât stay under.
His breathing hitched sharply.
âHeyâhey, look at me,â Liam said, reaching out, grabbing his sleeve just enough to anchor him. âFocus, okay? Weâre almostââ
Another crack split the air.
Louder.
Closer.
The beam dipped.
Actually dipped.
âGo!â Carlos shouted. âGo, go, go!â
That did it.
They ran.
Balance be damned.
Careful steps turned into quick, desperate strides as they bolted back the way theyâd come, the support column forgotten, the idea of crossing abandoned completely.
Behind them, something gave.
A section of the bridge above shifted violently, metal screaming as it tore against itself. The infected clustered there stumbled, collapsed into one anotherâ
And then the entire segment dropped.
The sound was deafening.
Concrete and steel crashing down, taking dozensâhundredsâof infected with it as the structure caved inward toward the river.
âRun!â Max shouted unnecessarily.
They were already running.
The beam bucked under their feet, throwing off their balance. Alex nearly went down, caught at the last second by George. Esteban slipped, slamming a knee hard against the metal but forcing himself back up with a gasp.
Behind them, the collapse spread.
Not the entire bridgeâbut enough.
Enough to make it clear that staying any longer would kill them.
They reached the embankment in a staggered rush, scrambling up the damp slope with shaking hands and slipping boots.
Lando was already at the top, waving them on frantically. âMove, move, moveâ!â
One by one, they cleared it.
Kimi last.
He didnât look back until he reached solid ground.
And when he didâ
The sight stuck.
A massive section of the bridge had torn away, collapsing into the river below in a twisted mess of metal and concrete. The water churned violently around it, dragging everything downâdebris, cars, bodies.
So many bodies.
The infected that hadnât fallen still crowded the remaining sections, their movements frantic now, disoriented by the sudden destruction.
It looked like the world breaking.
Like something final.
âNope,â Ollie said, breathless. âNope, we are not doing that again. Ever.â
No one disagreed.
Max turned away first. âWeâre done here.â
Charles nodded once, pale but steady. âWe turn around.â
There it was.
The thing none of them wanted to admit.
âWe go through Waco,â Lewis said quietly.
Silence followed.
Because they all knew what that meant.
More risk.
More unknowns.
But there wasnât another option anymore.
The bridge had made that decision for them.
They ran back to the vehicles.
Adrenaline carried them the rest of the way, shoving aside exhaustion and fear just long enough to get moving again.
Doors slammed.
Engines roared to life.
âGo!â Lando shouted into the walkie, already throwing the truck into gear.
Max didnât wait.
The Suburban peeled out first, tires spitting gravel as it swung back onto the road. The truck followed close behindâ
Too close.
The abandoned cars near the bridge created a bottleneck, forcing them to weave sharply between rusted frames and shattered glass.
âCarefulâ!â Oscar started.
Too late.
The truck clipped one.
It wasnât a full collisionâjust a hard, glancing hit against a half-crushed sedanâbut it was enough.
A sharp crack.
A hiss.
âShit,â Lando muttered, gripping the wheel tighter.
âWhat was that?â Oscar asked, bracing himself.
âThe radiator,â Lando said. âI thinkââ
The temperature gauge spiked.
Fast.
âYeah,â he finished grimly. âThatâs bad.â
Behind them, the bridge continued to groan and settle, pieces still falling intermittently into the river.
They didnât slow down.
Not until they were far enough away that the sound faded into the distance.
Only then did Lando ease off the gas slightly.
The truck shuddered.
Coughed.
And thenâ
Died.
ââŠNo,â Ollie said from the back. âNo, no, noââ
Lando tried the ignition again.
Nothing.
âFuck.â
Ahead, the Suburban slowed, then turned back toward them.
Max already knew.
Of course he did.
They all did.
The truck was done.
Which meantâ
âWeâre all squeezing in,â Gabriel said, voice hollow.
Ollie let out a hysterical half-laugh. âOh, thatâs going to be fun.â
No one else laughed.
Because there were too many of them.
And not enough space.
And the day wasnât even close to over.
The Suburban looked smaller the moment they all turned toward it.
It hadnât changed, not really. Same scratched paint, same dent along the side panel, same worn seats inside. But with the truck dead on the roadside behind them and sixteen people standing in a loose, stunned cluster, it felt⊠insufficient.
âRight,â Alex said after a long, quiet second. âThatâs not going to work.â
âIt will,â Max replied flatly.
Alex blinked. âThere are sixteen of us.â
âFifteen seats if we get creative,â Carlos corrected.
âThat is not how seats work.â
âWe donât have a choice,â Lewis said.
That ended the argument before it could even start.
Because that was the truth of it.
It always was.
Packing them in took longer than anyone wanted.
Not because they were being carefulâif anything, they rushedâbut because there were simply too many bodies and not enough space to put them.
âOkay, no, thatâs my leg,â Ollie protested as someone shoved past him.
âI know,â Pierre said dully. âItâs still going there.â
âIt absolutely is notââ
âIt is if you want to leave before nightfall.â
âThatâs a threat.â
âItâs a fact.â
In the front, Max had already reclaimed the driverâs seat, hands gripping the wheel like if he let go for even a second, something else would fall apart. Charles slid into the passenger side with a quiet grunt, carefully angling himself to avoid bumping his bandaged arm.
âDonât touch it,â he snapped immediately as Maxâs elbow brushed too close.
âI didnât,â Max shot back.
âYou almost did.â
âThatâs not the same thing.â
âIt is when I only have one hand left, Max.â
Max went very still for half a second.
Then, quieter, âI know.â
The tension didnât disappear.
But it shifted.
Behind them, the middle row turned into a negotiation zone.
Carlos climbed in first, pressing himself as far to one side as possible. Lewis followed, then George, who took one look at the available space and let out a low, unimpressed exhale.
âThis is ridiculous.â
âSit,â Carlos said.
âI am sitting. Iâm just⊠overlapping.â
âYouâll survive.â
âThat remains to be seen.â
Alex squeezed in next, effectively eliminating any concept of personal space. âWeâre going to have to stack,â he said.
âWe are not stacking,â George replied.
âWe are absolutely stacking.â
In the back row, things were somehow worse.
Pierre slid in first, expression distant, movements mechanical. Esteban followed, wincing slightly as he adjusted his bruised arm. Kimi and Ollie climbed in after them, the two of them immediately pressed shoulder-to-shoulder with no room to move.
âHi,â Ollie said weakly.
âHi,â Kimi replied.
âI canât feel my left arm.â
âThatâs probably fine.â
âI donât think it is.â
âToo late now.â
They made it work.
Barely.
And then came the rest.
Franco hesitated before climbing in, eyes flicking once toward where the truck had been abandoned, like part of him was still stuck there. Then he forced himself forward, squeezing into whatever space remained, silent and distant.
Liam climbed in next, immediately turning to help Isack.
âCome on,â he said gently.
Isack stared at the vehicle for a second too long.
Too many people.
Too little space.
Too many ways something could go wrong.
âIââ he started, then stopped.
Liam didnât push.
He just reached out, taking Isackâs wrist lightly. âHey. Itâs okay. Iâve got you.â
That seemed to cut through it.
Barely.
But enough.
Isack nodded once and let Liam guide him in, the two of them folding into the cramped space together. There wasnât room to sit normally, so Isack ended up half-leaning into Liamâs side, their legs tangled awkwardly with everyone elseâs.
No one commented.
No one had the energy.
Finally, Gabriel climbed in last.
He hesitated at the door, glancing back once at the road, at the direction of the bridge, at the place theyâd just barely escaped.
Then he shut the door.
âEveryone in?â Max called.
A chorus of reluctant, overlapping affirmations answered him.
âDefine âin,ââ Ollie muttered.
Max ignored that and started the engine.
The Suburban dipped slightly under the weight.
But it held.
âSeatbelts,â Carlos said automatically.
There was a pause.
Thenâ
ââŠThatâs funny,â Alex said.
It was uncomfortable immediately.
Not gradually.
Not something they adjusted to over time.
Immediately.
Limbs pressed into limbs. Shoulders jammed together. Someoneâs knee digging into someone elseâs back. The air inside the vehicle warmed quickly from shared body heat, fogging the windows despite the cold outside.
âThis is a nightmare,â Ollie said.
âYouâre alive,â Pierre replied flatly.
âDebatable.â
From the front, Charles shifted slightly, wincing. âWe need to rotate seats.â
âNo,â Max said.
âYes,â Charles insisted. âSomeone tall is going in the middle.â
âI refuse.â
From behind them, George spoke without missing a beat. âWonderful. I volunteer Max.â
A beat.
Then, despite everythingâ
A few quiet laughs.
Even Max huffed once, shaking his head. âNot happening.â
âCoward,â Alex muttered.
âDriver,â Max corrected.
âTemporary.â
âDo you want to walk?â
ââŠDriver.â
The moment passed.
Small.
Brief.
But real.
The farmhouse came into view just as the light began to shift.
Not dark yet.
But heading there.
It sat off the road, partially obscured by overgrown trees and a sagging fence line. From a distance, it looked intactâweathered, but standing.
âCould work,â Carlos said.
âOr itâs already occupied,â Esteban added.
âEverything is,â Lewis replied.
Max slowed the Suburban, eyes scanning the property carefully. No immediate movement. No obvious signs of a horde.
âLetâs check it,â he said.
No one argued.
They couldnât afford to.
The house creaked when they stepped inside.
Old wood. Settling structure. The kind of sound that mightâve been normal once, before everything meant something else.
âClear,â Alex called from the main room.
âUpstairs clear,â George added a minute later.
âKitchenâs fine,â Carlos said.
It was⊠quiet.
Too quiet.
But safe enough.
For now.
âBasement?â Pierre asked.
There was a pause.
No one liked that word anymore.
Not after the river.
Not after everything.
âIâll check,â Gabriel said.
Francoâs head snapped up slightly at that, something flickering in his otherwise distant expression.
âIâll go with you,â Liam added.
Gabriel shook his head. âItâs fine. Iâll justâquick look.â
âDonâtââ Carlos started.
But Gabriel was already moving.
The smell hit first.
Damp.
Rot.
Water.
âGabriel?â Liam called after him.
No response.
Just the faint creak of steps descending.
And thenâ
A splash.
Small.
But wrong.
Liam moved immediately, crossing the room in two quick strides and yanking the basement door open.
âGabrielâ?â
What he sawâ
Water.
The basement was flooded, murky and still, rising halfway up the stairs. The surface rippled unnaturally, disturbed by something beneath it.
And Gabrielâ
Was slipping.
His foot went out from under him on the submerged step, his body pitching forward into the dark water with a sharp gasp.
âShitâ!â
He surfaced for half a secondâ
Then something grabbed him.
Not visible.
Not clearly.
Just movement.
A force pulling him down.
His hands broke the surface again, clawing at nothing, at air, at the edge of the stepâ
âHelpâ!â
The word cut off into a choked scream as he was dragged under.
The water swallowed the sound.
âMOVE!â Liam shouted.
He lunged forward, but strong hands grabbed him from behindâMax, Carlos, someoneâyanking him back before he could throw himself in after him.
âThere are infected in there!â Carlos snapped.
âWe have toâ!â
Another splash.
Thenâ
Nothing.
Just ripples.
Just dark water.
Just silence.
Franco didnât move.
Didnât speak.
Didnât react.
He just stared at the surface like if he looked hard enough, Gabriel would come back up.
He didnât.
He wouldnât.
And everyone knew it.
The basement stayed still.
Like it had swallowed him whole.
No one suggested going down there.
No one suggested retrieving the body.
Because they couldnât.
Because they wouldnât make it back up.
âUpstairs,â Lewis said quietly. âWe stay upstairs.â
It wasnât comfort.
It wasnât reassurance.
It was survival.
And it came at a cost.
Franco still hadnât moved.
Kimi stepped closer slowly, careful, like approaching something fragile. âFrancoâŠâ
No response.
Ollie hovered nearby, unsure, eyes flicking between the basement door and Francoâs face.
âHey,â he tried softly.
Nothing.
It was like something had shut off inside him.
Like the part that reacted had just⊠stopped.
Across the room, Isackâs breathing had gone uneven again.
Not loud.
But sharp.
Too fast.
Too shallow.
âIââ he started, voice breaking. âI canâtâhe justâhe was right thereââ
Liam was there immediately.
âIâve got you,â he said, pulling Isack close without hesitation, one hand steady against the back of his neck.
Isack didnât resist.
Didnât pull away.
He just grabbed onto Liam like he needed something solid to prove the world hadnât just disappeared out from under him.
âIâm not going anywhere,â Liam murmured, low and firm. âOkay? Iâm right here.â
Isack nodded against him, though his hands didnât loosen.
Not even a little.
Around them, the group stood in the aftermath.
One more gone.
One more loss they couldnât fix.
One more reminderâ
That nowhere was safe.
Not the road.
Not the water.
Not even a house that looked untouched from the outside.
Especially not that.
Outside, the light continued to fade.
And insideâ
No one felt like they could breathe properly anymore.
Night settled slowly, like it wasnât sure it wanted to touch the house either.
The last of the light filtered weakly through the dirty windows, turning everything a dull, washed-out gray before finally giving in to darkness. No one turned on lightsânot that there were any working ones leftâbut even if there had been, they wouldnât have risked it. Darkness was safer.
Or at least, it felt like it was supposed to be.
They stayed upstairs.
No discussion. No vote. Just an unspoken agreement that no one was going anywhere near the basement again.
The door stayed shut.
SomeoneâMax, maybe Carlosâhad dragged a heavy cabinet in front of it. Not to keep anything out.
To keep something in.
That thought sat with all of them, whether they admitted it or not.
They spread out as best they could across the upper floor, which wasnât saying much. The house had maybe three rooms that were usable, all of them small, all of them too close together. The floor creaked with every shift of weight, every step, every reminder that the structure beneath them was old and tired and not entirely trustworthy.
Still better than outside.
Still better than the basement.
âPair up,â Carlos said quietly. âNo one alone.â
No one argued.
They didnât need to be told twice.
Max took the spot closest to the stairwell.
Not sleeping.
Just sitting with his back against the wall, one knee up, something heavy resting across his lap like he expected to need it at any second. His gaze stayed fixed on the hallway, on the door at the end of it, on anything that might move.
Charles sat a few feet away, leaning against the opposite wall. His injured arm was cradled carefully against his chest, the bandage already needing to be redone, though he didnât have the energy to deal with it now.
âYou should sleep,â Charles said after a while.
Max didnât look at him. âYou first.â
Charles huffed quietly. âThatâs not how this works.â
âNo?â Max replied. âFeels like it is.â
A beat.
Then, softer, almost reluctant: âIâm fine.â
Charles didnât call him out on it.
Didnât point out that none of them were fine.
He just shifted slightly, letting his head fall back against the wall, eyes half-closing despite himself.
âWake me in a few hours,â he murmured.
Max didnât respond.
In one of the bedrooms, the rest of them tried to make something resembling sleep happen.
It was crowded.
Of course it was.
Bodies packed together on the floor, against walls, wherever there was space to sit or lie down without overlapping too much. Jackets and hoodies became makeshift pillows. Someone found an old blanket in a closetâthin and scratchy, but better than nothingâand it got passed around until it covered as many people as possible.
Ollie ended up wedged between Kimi and Alex, one arm trapped awkwardly under him.
âI canât feel anything,â he whispered.
âYou say that like itâs new,â Alex murmured back.
âIâm serious. If I wake up and itâs goneââ
âItâs still attached,â Kimi said quietly. âI checked.â
âGreat. Fantastic. Reassuring.â
A pause.
ââŠThanks,â Ollie added, softer this time.
Across the room, Franco sat against the wall, knees drawn up slightly, eyes open.
Unblinking.
He hadnât spoken since the basement.
Hadnât reacted.
Hadnât done anything except exist in the same space as everyone else, like his body had shown up but everything inside it had stayed somewhere else.
Esteban sat near him, close enough to reach if he needed to, but not touching.
Not pushing.
Just⊠there.
âYou should try to rest,â Esteban said quietly.
No response.
Franco didnât even seem to register that heâd spoken.
Esteban exhaled slowly, glancing away.
There wasnât anything else he could do.
Not tonight.
On the far side of the room, Isack hadnât let go of Liam.
Not fully.
Even now, hours later, after the panic had dulled into something quieter but no less heavy, he stayed closeâpressed into Liamâs side, one hand loosely gripping the fabric of his sleeve like he needed that point of contact to stay grounded.
Liam didnât pull away.
Didnât comment on it.
He just adjusted slightly so Isack could lean more comfortably, one arm draped loosely around his shoulders.
âYou should sleep,â Liam murmured.
Isack shook his head against him. âDonât want to.â
âYeah,â Liam said. âMe neither.â
They sat like that for a while.
Listening.
To the creaks of the house.
To the quiet, uneven breathing of everyone around them.
To the occasional shift from downstairsâthe kind that mightâve just been the water settling.
Or might not have been.
Isackâs grip tightened slightly.
âLiam?â
âYeah?â
A pause.
ââŠYou wonâtââ He stopped, swallowed, tried again. âYou wonât just disappear, right?â
The question sat there, fragile and heavy and too real.
Liam didnât hesitate.
âRight,â he said, voice low but certain.
Isack sighed, the faintest laugh audible, though he didnât lift his head.
âOkay.â
Liamâs hand moved slightly against his shoulder, a small, grounding pressure.
They stayed like that.
Closer than theyâd ever been before.
Not rushed.
Not forced.
Just⊠necessary.
Eventually, exhaustion started to win.
Not fully.
Not peacefully.
But enough that peopleâs eyes closed, heads dipped, breathing evened out just slightly.
Sleep came in fragments.
In short, restless stretches.
In half-dreams that snapped apart at the smallest sound.
No one slept deeply.
No one slept well.
But they slept.
Max was still awake when the house finally went quiet.
Still watching.
Still listening.
The fog outside had thickened again, pressing against the windows like something alive. The world beyond the glass had disappeared entirely, swallowed whole by gray.
Behind him, he could hear the others.
Shifting.
Breathing.
Existing.
Fewer than before.
Always fewer.
His gaze flicked, just once, toward the door that led downstairs.
All characters and real people depicted are fictionalized for storytelling purposes. No harm or offense is intended. Content may include mature themesâreader discretion advised.
Summary: After a brutal rescue and an even harder choice to let survivors go, the group presses forward, haunted by who they couldnât save and what it cost them. With tensions rising and hope thinning, they turn toward the ominous promise of the Black Bridgeâunsure if it leads to survival, or something far worse.
Warnings: Death (Minor), Graphic Injury (Amputation), Infection, Gore, Emotional Distress, Dark Humor, PTSD/Dissociation, Violence
Word Count: 4.8k+
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Oct 23, 2025, 9:00 AM
Morning came too clean for the kind of world they were living in.
The sky stretched out in a pale, endless blue, the kind that wouldâve meant something onceâwouldâve been commented on, appreciated, maybe even photographed. Now it just felt wrong. Too bright. Too open. Like the world was pretending nothing had happened.
The abandoned roadside store looked even worse in daylight.
What had been shadowy and uncertain in the night was now fully visibleâshattered glass glittering across the cracked concrete, shelves half-collapsed and picked through, the doors hanging crooked on bent hinges. The wind pushed through it in slow, hollow breaths, rattling something metallic deeper inside.
It didnât look like a place people had simply left.
It looked like a place people had fled.
Still, it had given them walls. A roof. A few hours of sleep that hadnât been constantly interrupted by movement or noise.
That was enough.
âPairs,â Max said, already moving as he spoke, voice cutting clean through the quiet. âNo one alone. Quick in, quick out.â
There were nods, murmured agreements. No arguments.
They were getting better at that.
Kimi ended up with Ollie without either of them really saying anything about it. It just⊠happened. The kind of quiet decision that didnât need discussion anymore.
Liam and Isack peeled off toward the back storage area, while Kimi and Ollie headed toward the main aisles, stepping carefully over debris and broken glass.
The smell hit them almost immediately.
Not as bad as the dairy plant.
But close enough to make Ollieâs stomach twist.
âGod,â he muttered under his breath, pulling the collar of his hoodie up over his nose. âWhy does everywhere smell like something died?â
âBecause something probably did,â Kimi replied, matter-of-fact.
âYeah, thanks. That helps.â
Kimi glanced at him briefly, the corner of his mouth twitching. âYou asked.â
Ollie huffed, but there wasnât much energy behind it.
They moved slowly, scanning shelves more out of habit than hope. Most of what remained was uselessâexpired, crushed, or already torn open. A few cans here and there, a couple of sealed bottles shoved behind fallen boxes.
Kimi grabbed what he could, passing things to Ollie to stuff into a worn backpack.
For a while, it was just that.
Routine.
Quiet.
Almost normal, in a distant, broken way.
Until Kimi pushed open a half-jammed door near the back hallway.
âIâll checkââ he started.
And then stopped.
There was movement.
Close.
Too close.
Kimi froze, instinct kicking in immediately, his hand tightening around the edge of the door as he leaned just slightly to look inside.
For a split second, his brain tried to process what he was seeing.
It didnât.
Because it wasnât what he expected.
At all.
He blinked once.
Twice.
Then immediately stepped back out and pulled the door shut againâquickly, quietly, like he hadnât seen anything.
Like nothing had happened.
He turned aroundâ
âand nearly walked straight into Ollie.
Ollieâs eyes were wide.
Really wide.
âOh myââ Ollie choked, clapping a hand over his mouth as if that would physically hold the reaction in. âI did not need to see that.â
Kimi stared at him for half a second.
âYou saw that too?â he asked, incredulous.
âIâyes?!â Ollie whisper-shouted, voice cracking slightly. âDid you justââ
âI didnât even mean toââ Kimi cut in, shaking his head, a disbelieving grin already breaking through despite everything. âI thought something was wrong.â
âWell, something was definitely happening,â Ollie shot back, his voice dropping on the last word like it might somehow make it less real.
That did it.
They both lost it.
Not loudâcouldnât be loudâbut the kind of laughter that bursts out anyway, sharp and sudden and impossible to stop once it starts. Kimi doubled over slightly, dragging a hand down his face as he triedâand failedâto contain it, while Ollie leaned back against a shelf, shoulders shaking.
It was ridiculous.
Completely, utterly ridiculous.
In the middle of everythingâof the world ending, of running and surviving and barely holding it togetherâ
Franco and Gabriel were making out in a storage closet.
âFor fuckâs sake,â Ollie wheezed, wiping at his eyes. âLikeâreally? Here? Now?â
âI donâtââ Kimi shook his head again, laughing under his breath. âI donât even know what I expected when I opened that door, but it was not that.â
Ollie let out another strangled laugh. âI thought it was an infected or something!â
âSo did I!â
âThat is so much worse!â
Kimi snorted. âIs it?â
âYes!â Ollie insisted, then paused. âOkayâno. But emotionally? Yes.â
That set them off again.
Quieter this time.
But just as real.
For a moment, it felt⊠lighter.
Not fixed.
Not okay.
But lighter.
Like something inside their chests had loosened just enough to let them breathe properly again.
Ollie dragged in a breath, still smiling faintly as the laughter faded. âWe are never making eye contact with them again.â
âAgreed,â Kimi said immediately.
A beat passed.
ââŠDo we tell anyone?â Ollie asked, lowering his voice instinctively like the walls themselves might hear.
Kimi didnât even hesitate. âAbsolutely not.â
âYeah, no, that stays buried,â Ollie nodded quickly. âDeep. Likeânever happened.â
âExactly.â
Another quiet laugh slipped between them.
Then, like a switch flipping, they both straightened slightly.
Because the world didnât stay light for long.
It never did.
âAlright,â Kimi said, clearing his throat. âLetâs justâkeep going.â
âYeah,â Ollie agreed.
They moved on.
But the ghost of that moment lingered.
A small, fragile thing.
Something human.
Further back in the store, Liam stood awkwardly near a collapsed jewelry rack, turning a thin gold chain over in his hands.
It wasnât worth anything anymore.
Not really.
But it was intact.
Clean.
Untouched.
Which made it rare.
Isack hovered a few steps away, watching him with a slight tilt of his head. âYou taking that?â
Liam hesitated.
âUhââ He glanced down at it again. âI mean. Itâs not useful, butâŠâ
He trailed off.
Then, before he could overthink it too much, he stepped closer and held it out.
âYou should have it,â he said.
Isack blinked. âWhat?â
âItâdââ Liam stopped, suddenly very aware of how this sounded. âItâd look nice on you. I think.â
Silence.
Brief.
But loud.
Isack stared at him for a second longer than necessary, something unreadable flickering across his expression.
âOh,â he said finally.
Then, softer: âOkay.â
He reached out, taking the chain carefully, their fingers brushing for just a second longer than needed.
Neither of them pulled away immediately.
âThanks,â Isack added, quieter now. He turned the chain in his hand before unclasping it, putting it on.
Liam shrugged, looking anywhere but at him. âYeah. No problem.â
The air between them shifted.
Not dramatically.
But enough.
The scream cut through the store like a blade.
Raw.
Sharp.
Completely unfiltered.
Everyone froze.
âWhat the hellâ?!â someone shouted from the front.
Kimi and Ollie were already moving before the echo had even faded, adrenaline slamming back into place as they ran toward the sound.
âCharles!â Maxâs voiceâangry, panickedârang out from near the entrance.
They skidded to a stop just short of the scene.
And for a secondâ
It didnât make sense.
It didnât register.
Because the human brain isnât built to process something like that instantly.
Charles was on the floor.
Half-sitting, half-collapsed against a broken counter.
His face was paleâtoo paleâand slick with sweat, his breath coming in uneven, shallow pulls.
The handâhis handâthe one that had been cut in the riverâ
It wasnât there anymore.
In its place was a jagged, hastily wrapped stump, fabric already darkening as blood soaked through it in uneven patches.
For a moment, no one spoke.
No one moved.
Because the reality of it lagged behind the sight.
Then everything hit at once.
âWhat the FUCK did you do?!â Max exploded, dropping to his knees in front of him, hands hovering like he didnât know where to touch without making it worse.
Charles let out a strained, almost hysterical breath that mightâve been a laugh. âI wasnâtâtaking chances.â
His voice shook.
Not from regret.
From pain.
From adrenaline.
From something deeper.
âIt was getting worse,â he forced out, words tight. âIt was spreading.â
âYou donât justââ Max cut himself off, dragging a hand through his hair, eyes wide with something dangerously close to panic. âYou donât just cut off your own hand!â
Charles met his gaze.
And there was something unsteady there.
But also something terrifyingly certain.
âI do if it means I donât turn.â
Silence crashed back down.
Heavy.
Suffocating.
Because no one could argue with that.
Not really.
Not anymore.
Kimi swallowed hard, forcing himself to look away from the blood, from the reality of it, his pulse hammering in his ears.
Ollie didnât.
He couldnât.
He just stood there, staring, his face drained of color.
Because thisâ
This was new.
A line crossed.
A choice made.
And it changed something.
For all of them.
They left the store faster than planned.
No one said it out loud, but there was a shared understanding: they couldnât stay there anymore.
Not after that.
Not with the smell of blood thick in the air.
Not with the image of it burned into their heads.
Charles was stabilized as best they couldâbandaged tighter, arm secured, pain dulled slightly with what little they had left.
He didnât complain.
Didnât speak much at all.
Max stayed close.
Too close.
Like if he looked away, something else would go wrong.
The vehicles were loaded in near silence.
Doors slammed.
Engines turned.
And just like thatâ
They were moving again.
Heading northeast.
Away from Waco.
Or at least trying to.
No one said it, but the direction felt less like a plan and more like a gamble.
Because everything was now.
They hadnât been on the road long when someone spotted it.
âSmoke,â George said over the walkie, his voice cutting through the static.
Lando frowned slightly, adjusting his grip on the wheel. âWhere?â
âDistance. Northeast. Multiple columns.â
Kimi leaned forward slightly from the back seat, squinting through the windshield.
There it was.
Dark streaks against the clear sky.
Too thick to be accidental.
Too many to ignore.
Ollie shifted beside him. âThatâs⊠not good, right?â
âNo,â Kimi said quietly. âItâs not.â
The convoy slowed slightly.
Not stopping.
But not pushing forward blindly either.
Because smoke like that only meant one thing now.
And they all knew it.
They didnât turn toward the smoke immediately.
That was the first decision.
It hung between them in the silence that followed Georgeâs callout, carried in the low static of the walkies and the steady hum of both engines. The Suburban kept a consistent distance ahead, its dark shape cutting through the pale morning light, while the truck followed just behind, tires crunching over uneven asphalt.
No one said âgo.â
No one said âdonât.â
But everyone was thinking it.
Lando adjusted his grip on the steering wheel, glancing briefly at Oscar in the passenger seat. Oscar had one arm hooked loosely through the handle above the door, his posture still slightly curled inward despite the warmth of the heater blowing steadily toward him. He looked better than he had the night beforeâless pale, more presentâbut there was still a fragility to him that hadnât been there days ago.
âYou seeing it?â Lando asked quietly.
Oscar nodded once, eyes fixed on the distant horizon. âYeah.â
The smoke columns were clearer now.
Thicker.
Darker.
Not just one.
Several.
And they werenât drifting lazily like something abandoned.
They were active.
Alive.
Something was burning.
âCould be a distraction,â Ollie said from the back, though his voice lacked conviction. âLikeâsomeone trying to pull infected away from somewhere else.â
âOr the opposite,â Kimi replied. âCould be drawing them in.â
âEither way,â Oscar murmured, âit means people.â
That word settled heavily in the space between them.
People.
Alive.
Maybe.
Lando reached for the walkie clipped near the dash. âMax, you seeing this?â
A crackle.
Then: âYeah,â Maxâs voice came through, tight but controlled. âWeâre slowing. Not stopping yet.â
âCopy.â
Another pause.
Then Lewisâs voice cut in, clearer, more direct. âWe need to decide now. If weâre going to check it out, we donât circle for ten minutes thinking about it. Thatâs how you get caught out here.â
Carlos responded almost immediately. âAnd we donât just drive straight into something like that either. You remember Austin?â
Silence followed that.
Heavy.
Because everyone did.
The chaos.
The noise.
The way helping had almost gotten them all killed.
âDifferent situation,â Lewis said, though there was less certainty in it than usual.
âIs it?â Carlos shot back. âSmoke, people in trouble, no clear exitâsounds familiar to me.â
From the truck bed, Francoâs voice crackled through faintly over a third walkie. âCould be a small group. Not a city.â
âCould be a trap,â Alex added from the Suburban.
âEverythingâs a trap now,â George muttered, almost to himself.
That didnât help.
Lando exhaled slowly, eyes flicking between the road and the horizon. âWe donât have to go in. We can justâget close enough to see whatâs happening.â
âAnd then what?â Carlos asked.
No one answered.
Because that was the problem.
Seeing meant choosing.
And choosing meant consequences.
They compromised.
Or something close to it.
The vehicles veered slightly off their original path, angling toward the smoke but keeping distance, weaving through back roads and open stretches where visibility stayed clear. The terrain shifted as they movedâless abandoned highway, more scattered structures, remnants of what had once been a small settlement or outskirts of something larger.
The closer they got, the worse it looked.
Smoke wasnât just rising now.
It was pouring.
Thick, black plumes clawing into the sky from multiple points, some lower, some spreading wider. The smell hit them nextâburning wood, plastic, something chemical underneath it, and something elseâ
Something they didnât want to name.
âJesus,â Ollie whispered.
The road ahead curved slightly, dipping just enough to obscure the full view for a moment.
Then they crested it.
And everything came into focus.
The settlementâif it could still be called thatâwas collapsing.
Buildingsâsmall houses, makeshift barricades, vehicles shoved together into crude wallsâwere already overrun. Fire had taken hold in at least three places, flames licking up walls and tearing through anything that could burn. The barricades had been breached in multiple spots.
And the infectedâ
There were too many.
They moved in waves, spilling through gaps, climbing over obstacles, drawn by sound, by movement, by chaos. Not scattered.
Focused.
Predatory.
People were still inside.
That was the worst part.
You could see them.
Running.
Fighting.
Trying.
âFuck,â Lando breathed.
Over the walkie, Max didnât say anything for a long second.
Then: âWeâre not going in.â
Relief flickeredâ
Brief.
Because Lewisâs voice cut through it almost immediately.
âWe canât just leave them.â
Carlos swore under his breath. âWe canât save them either.â
âWe can save some,â Lewis insisted. âThereâleft side, near that collapsed fenceâthereâs a gap. We could pull a few out.â
âAnd then what?â Carlos snapped. âWe take them with us? Feed them with what? Protect them how?â
âWe donât justâdrive away,â Lewis said, and there it was againâthat edge, that refusal to let go of something fundamental even as the world demanded it.
In the truck, Kimi felt Ollie shift beside him.
Tense.
Watching.
Waiting.
âLewis,â Max said finally, voice lower now, controlled in a way that meant he was holding something back. âLook at it.â
âI am.â
âNoâyouâre not,â Max shot back. âYouâre looking at the idea of it. Not whatâs actually there.â
A beat.
Then, quieter: âWe go in, we donât come out. Not all of us.â
Silence followed.
Because that was the truth.
And they all knew it.
Another voiceâGeorge this time, faint but steadyâcame through. âThereâs too many.â
Then Alex: âFireâs spreading fast. Windâs picking up.â
As if to prove it, a section of one of the burning structures collapsed inward with a shower of sparks, sending a fresh wave of smoke rolling outward.
Time was running out.
For them.
For the people inside.
For everyone.
Lewis exhaled sharply over the line.
Then: âOne pass.â
Carlos didnât even hesitate. âNo.â
âOne pass,â Lewis repeated, firmer. âWe donât stop. We donât get boxed in. We take whoever can reach the road and we go.â
âAnd if that turns into ten people?â Carlos demanded.
âIt wonât,â Lewis said, though he couldnât guarantee that.
âYou donât know that.â
âI know we canât leave without trying.â
That landed.
Because it wasnât strategy.
It wasnât logic.
It was something else.
Something older.
Something harder to kill.
Maxâs grip tightened on the wheel. Everyone could hear it in the way his voice came back, quieter now.
ââŠOne pass.â
Carlos swore againâbut he didnât argue further.
Because that was the compromise.
And it was a dangerous one.
They moved fast after that.
No more circling.
No more debating.
The Suburban took the lead, angling toward the least congested side of the settlement, while the truck followed close behind, ready to pull out just as quickly as they went in.
âWindows up,â Lando said. âDoors locked. No one opens anything unless we say.â
In the back, Franco and Liam shifted in the truck bed, bracing themselves, while Isack tightened his grip on the side rail, eyes fixed ahead.
Kimi leaned forward slightly, scanning the edges of the road, tracking movement.
âThere,â he said suddenly. âLeftâtwo people, near the ditch.â
Lando saw them.
A man and a woman, stumbling, trying to move faster than their bodies allowed.
Behind themâ
Movement.
Closing.
âHold on,â Lando muttered, accelerating.
The truck swerved just enough to line up alongside them.
âGo!â Kimi shouted, already reaching back to yank the rear door open from the inside.
The man grabbed first, hauled up into the bed by Franco and Liam with a burst of desperate strength.
The woman stumbledâ
Fellâ
âGet her!â Ollie shouted.
Isack leaned out, catching her arm just before the gap widened too much, dragging her up towards the door with a strained grunt as the truck surged forward again.
âClose it!â Lando snapped.
The door slammed shut.
Behind them, the infected hit the space where theyâd been seconds too late.
âTwo,â Kimi said, breath tight.
âKeep moving,â Maxâs voice came through.
They pushed deeper along the outer edge.
Another cluster appearedâthree this time, one limping badly.
âToo many,â Carlos warned.
âWe can take one more,â Lewis said. âThatâs it.â
The Suburban slowed just enough.
George shoved the door open from the inside, reaching out.
âCome on!â he shouted.
One of them made it.
The other twoâ
Didnât.
The door slammed.
The Suburban surged forward again.
âGo, go, go!â
They didnât look back.
They couldnât.
By the time they cleared the settlementâs edge, the smoke had swallowed most of it.
The road stretched ahead againâempty, quiet, wrong.
Inside the truck, the rescued woman was shaking violently, her breaths coming in ragged, uneven bursts. The man sat hunched forward in the bed, staring at nothing, his hands trembling in his lap.
âHey,â Ollie said softly, trying to ground her. âYouâre okay. Youâre out.â
Her eyes snapped to him.
Wild.
Unfocused.
âNo,â she rasped. âNo, itâs notâitâs not safeââ
âYouâre safe enough,â Kimi said gently.
She shook her head frantically. âYou donât understandââ
âHey,â Ollie cut in, quieter but firmer. âBreathe first. Talk after.â
She tried.
God, she tried.
But something in her had already broken.
âTheyâre all gone,â she whispered, voice cracking. âEveryoneââ
No one interrupted.
Because what was there to say?
Nothing that mattered.
They didnât stop driving.
Not yet.
Not until the smoke was a distant smear behind them.
Only then did the convoy slow slightly, enough to breathe, enough to process what theyâd just done.
What they hadnât.
Over the walkie, Lewis spoke again, softer now. âWe did what we could.â
In the truck, the womanâs breathing had started to hitch.
Wrong.
Too shallow.
Too uneven.
Kimi noticed first, shifting closer. âHeyâstay with us, okay?â
Her eyes found his.
And for a second, they cleared.
Focused.
âYou canât go to Waco,â she said suddenly, gripping his sleeve with surprising strength.
âWeâre not,â Ollie said quickly. âWeâre heading aroundââ
âNo,â she cut him off, shaking her head weakly. âNot there. Not anywhere near it. Itâs worse than you think.â
Kimi exchanged a glance with Ollie.
âWe heard,â he said carefully.
She tightened her grip. âThereâs a way around.â
âYeah?â Kimi asked. âWhere?â
Her lips parted.
Hesitated.
Then: âThe Black Bridge.â
The name hung in the air.
Unfamiliar.
Ominous.
âWhat is that?â Ollie asked.
âA crossing,â she whispered. âOld. Not on most maps anymore. But itâs still there.â
âWhere?â Kimi pressed.
Her strength was fading fast now.
âNorth⊠east,â she murmured. âPast the burned fields⊠youâll see itâŠâ
Her grip slackened.
Kimiâs chest tightened. âHeyâstay with me.â
Her eyes flickered once more.
Then stilled.
Silence filled the truck.
Heavy.
Final.
Ollie swallowed hard, his voice barely there. âSheââ
âI know,â Kimi said quietly.
Over the walkie, Landoâs voice came through, low. âWeâve got⊠information.â
A pause.
âAbout a route,â he added.
Max responded after a second. âSend it.â
Kimi looked out at the road ahead.
At the unknown waiting for them.
ââŠBlack Bridge,â he said.
The road didnât feel the same after they left the settlement.
It wasnât just the smoke fading behind them in the rearview mirrors, or the way the sky stretched open and empty again, pale blue cut with cold wind. It was quieter in a way that felt wrong, like something had been decided back thereâsomething finalâand now the world had settled around it.
They drove for nearly twenty minutes before one of the survivors spoke up.
âStop here.â
Landoâs hands tightened slightly on the wheel of the truck. âHere?â he echoed, glancing out at the empty stretch of cracked road and low brush. âThereâs nothing here.â
âThatâs the point,â the man said through the back window, voice rough but steady. He was older than most of them, maybe mid-forties, with a limp that had slowed them down during the escape. âLess noise. Less attention.â
In the Suburban ahead, Maxâs voice crackled through the walkie. âWhatâs going on?â
âWeâve got a drop-off request,â Lando replied, eyes flicking to Oscar beside him. Oscar was awake now, bundled in a blanket, still pale but more alert. He gave a small, uncertain shrug.
There was a pause on the other end, then a quieter, more controlled: âYouâre stopping?â
Another voice cut in before Lando could answerâLewis. âIf they want out, we let them out.â
Carlos didnât say anything, but the silence carried agreement.
Lando exhaled slowly. âYeah. Weâre stopping.â
The truck slowed first, gravel crunching under the tires as he eased it off the road. The Suburban followed, pulling in just ahead, both vehicles idling in the cold morning air. For a moment, no one moved.
The man climbed out of the truck bed, stiff and careful, testing his weight as he landed. The second survivorâa younger woman with a bandage wrapped around her forearmâclimbed out of the suburban, eyes darting across the open space like she expected something to come tearing out of it at any second.
âAre you sure about this?â Oscar asked quietly.
The woman nodded immediately. âSafer than staying in a group that size,â she said. âNo offense.â
âNone taken,â Lando muttered.
It wasnât even untrue.
Groups drew attention. Noise. Risk. They all knew it.
The man stepped back from the truck, giving a small, almost awkward nod. âYou got us out of there,â he said. âThatâs more than most wouldâve done.â
No one responded right away.
What do you even say to that?
Youâre welcome didnât feel right.
Good luck felt worse.
So Lando just nodded back, jaw tight. âStay off the main roads,â he said instead. âAndââ he hesitated, then added, âif you see smoke again⊠donât go toward it.â
The man gave a humorless half-smile. âWasnât planning to.â
The woman looked at them one last time, her gaze lingeringâon Oscar, on Kimi and Ollie in the back, on the others she didnât know the names of.
âDonât die,â she said, blunt and quiet.
Then they turned and started walking.
No dramatic goodbye. No looking back.
Just two figures moving off into the open land until the distance swallowed them.
For a long moment, no one spoke.
Then, softly, through the walkie:
âLetâs move.â
Max again.
Always forward.
They got back on the road.
The Suburban took the lead this time, its dark frame cutting a steady line through the empty highway. The truck followed close behind, close enough that Lando could see the outline of Georgeâs head in the back window, unmoving, like he hadnât shifted since they started driving again.
âFeels wrong,â Ollie murmured from the back.
Kimi glanced at him. âWhat does?â
âLeaving people like that.â
Kimi didnât answer immediately. He watched the road instead, the way it stretched out ahead of them, endless and uncertain.
âThey chose it,â he said finally.
âI know,â Ollie replied. âDoesnât make it feel better.â
No one argued with that.
Up front, Oscar shifted slightly, pulling the blanket tighter around himself. âWe canât save everyone,â he said, voice quiet but firm.
It wasnât harsh.
Just⊠tired.
Lando glanced at him briefly, then back to the road. âWe barely save anyone.â
Oscar didnât respond.
Because that was true too.
In the Suburban, the silence sat heavier.
Charles leaned back in the passenger seat, his head tipped against the window, eyes closed. His sleeve was tied off tight where his hand used to be, the fabric darkened despite everything theyâd done to stop the bleeding.
Max kept his eyes forward.
He hadnât said much since the store.
Since the screaming.
Since the moment everything had tipped from bad into something worse.
âYou should rest,â Carlos said quietly from the middle row.
âIâm driving,â Max replied.
âThatâs not what I meant.â
Max didnât answer.
Behind them, Lewis watched the road through the side window, his expression distant, unreadable. The events of the morning played over and over in his mindâthe fire, the people they couldnât reach, the ones they left behind.
The one they didnât.
The womanâs voice still echoed.
The Black Bridge.
It sounded like a warning.
Or a promise.
Or both.
âWeâre really doing this?â Alex asked from the back, breaking the silence. âHeading toward something that sounds like it belongs in a horror story?â
âItâs a route,â Lewis said simply.
âOr a trap,â Pierre muttered, his voice flat, detached.
Esteban shifted beside him, wincing slightly as his bruised arm pressed against the seat. âEverythingâs a trap now.â
No one argued with that either.
George finally spoke, his voice quiet but steady. âWe donât have better options.â
All eyes drifted, almost unconsciously, to Charles.
To the bandage.
To the cost of their last âoption.â
Maxâs grip tightened on the wheel.
âNo,â he said. âWe donât.â
The land began to change as they drove.
Less debris.
Fewer abandoned cars.
More open stretches of road, broken up by clusters of buildings that looked untouched from a distanceâbut no one trusted distance anymore.
The wind picked up, rattling loose signs and carrying the faint smell of something burnt, though the smoke itself was long gone.
In the truck bed, Liam adjusted his grip on the side rail, the cold air biting at his face. Beside him, Isack pulled his jacket tighter, the gold chain catching briefly in the light before disappearing again beneath the fabric.
âYou okay?â Liam asked over the wind.
Isack nodded. âYeah.â
A pause.
ââŠThanks. For earlier.â
Liam shrugged, a little awkward. âIt suits you.â
Isack huffed a quiet laugh, shaking his head. âWeâre in the middle of the apocalypse and youâre stillââ
âStill what?â
ââŠthis.â
Liam smirked faintly. âCharming?â
âAnnoying,â Isack shot back, but there was no heat in it.
For a second, something almost normal passed between them.
Then the truck hit a bump, jolting them both, and the moment slipped away.
Hours passed like that.
Driving.
Watching.
Waiting.
No one said it out loud, but they were all expecting something to go wrong.
It always did.
But for onceâ
Nothing did.
No hordes.
No sudden ambush.
No desperate radio calls cutting through the static.
Just the road.
Just the wind.
Just the low, constant hum of engines carrying them forward.
All characters and real people depicted are fictionalized for storytelling purposes. No harm or offense is intended. Content may include mature themesâreader discretion advised.
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Summary: The season is over, the garage is quiet, and thereâs nothing left to hide behind. After one final meeting at the factory, Gabriel Bortoleto and Nico HĂŒlkenberg are forced to confront everything they never saidâuntil silence isnât an option anymore.
The factory always felt different when it was empty.
Gabi noticed it the moment he stepped out of the meeting room.
Same hallway. Same lights. Same glass walls that had reflected a hundred versions of him over the past yearânervous, exhausted, wired on adrenaline, trying too hard not to be the rookie everyone expected him to be.
But now?
It was quiet.
Too quiet.
The final debrief had run longer than expectedâend-of-season summaries, performance reviews, the polite corporate wrapping-up of a year that had felt anything but neat.
People had lingered at first. Handshakes. âSee you next year.â Promises to stay in touch that may or may not happen.
And then, slowlyâ
They left.
One by one.
Until it was justâŠ
This.
Gabi shoved his hands into his jacket pockets, exhaling softly as he walked down the corridor.
December 10th.
Season over.
Rookie yearâdone.
It shouldâve felt bigger.
Instead, it felt like standing at the edge of something and not knowing what came next.
âThought youâd have left already.â
Gabi didnât need to turn around to know who it was.
Still, he did.
Nico leaned against the wall a few meters back, arms crossed, jacket slung over one shoulder like he hadnât fully committed to leaving either.
He looked the same as always.
Calm.
Put together.
Like nothing ever really got to him.
Gabi swallowed.
âYeah,â he said. âI was just⊠heading out.â
Nico nodded once, pushing himself off the wall.
âGood meeting,â he said.
Gabi let out a quiet huff. âWas it?â
Nicoâs mouth twitched slightly. âAs good as those things get.â
âRight.â
Silence slipped in after that.
Not awkward.
Not exactly.
But not comfortable either.
Not the way it used to be.
Gabi shifted his weight, glancing toward the exit doors at the end of the hall.
âYou heading out too?â he asked.
âEventually.â
Another pause.
God, this was ridiculous.
They had spent an entire season together.
Flights. Briefings. Hours in debrief rooms, talking through every corner, every mistake, every fraction of a second.
And now they couldnât manage a normal conversation?
Gabi rubbed the back of his neck.
âFeels weird,â he admitted.
Nico tilted his head slightly. âWhat does?â
âNot having anything else to do,â Gabi said. âNo simulator. No travel. No⊠next race.â
Nico hummed quietly, considering that.
âYeah,â he said after a moment. âTakes a minute to get used to.â
Gabi glanced at him.
âYouâre not used to it yet?â
Nico let out a soft breath through his nose. âYouâd think I would be.â
Something in thatâ
Something tired.
Gabi noticed.
He always did.
That was the problem.
âGuess itâs different this year,â Gabi said, quieter now.
Nicoâs gaze flicked to him. âHow so?â
Gabi hesitated.
Because this was where it got complicated.
Where it stopped being about racing.
ââŠI donât know,â he said finally. âJust is.â
Nico watched him for a second longer than necessary.
Like he was waiting.
For something Gabi wasnât sure he could give.
âRight,â Nico said eventually.
And just like thatâ
The moment slipped.
Again.
Gabi exhaled, looking away.
âAnyway,â he said, forcing something lighter into his voice. âI should go.â
Nico nodded.
âYeah.â
Neither of them moved.
Of course they didnât.
Gabi let out a quiet, almost disbelieving laugh.
âThis is stupid,â he muttered.
That got Nicoâs attention.
âWhat is?â
âThis,â Gabi gestured vaguely between them. âWhatever this is.â
Nicoâs expression shifted slightly.
Careful now.
âJust feels like weâre⊠avoiding something,â Gabi added.
Nico didnât answer right away.
Didnât deflect, either.
Which was new.
ââŠAnd what do you think that is?â he asked.
Gabi let out a slow breath.
His heart was beating faster now.
Ridiculous.
Heâd driven at 300 km/h this year and this was what made him nervous?
âDonât do that,â Gabi said.
âDo what?â
âMake me say it first.â
Nicoâs jaw tightened slightly.
âIâm notââ
âYou are,â Gabi cut in, softer but firmer. âYou always do.â
That landed.
Because it was true.
Nico looked away for a second, something unreadable flickering across his expression.
When he looked backâ
It was still there.
Just buried.
ââŠYouâre a rookie,â Nico said, like that explained everything.
Gabi blinked.
âWhat?â
âYou had enough on your plate this year,â Nico continued. âDidnât need⊠complications.â
Gabi stared at him.
âComplications?â
Nico exhaled, like he was already regretting this.
âYou know what I mean.â
âNo,â Gabi said, shaking his head. âActually, I donât.â
Another pause.
Longer this time.
He could feel it slipping again.
Feel Nico pulling back into something safer, something quieter, somethingâ
Untouchable.
Gabi stepped forward.
Just one step.
But it was enough.
âNo,â he said again, quieter now. âYou donât get to do that.â
Nicoâs eyes snapped back to him.
âDo what?â
âDecide what I can and canât handle,â Gabi said. âWithout even asking me.â
Nicoâs expression hardened slightly.
âThatâs not what I wasââ
âThen what were you doing?â Gabi pressed.
Silence.
Real silence this time.
Heavy.
Honest.
Nico ran a hand over the back of his neck, something uncharacteristically restless in the movement.
âI was trying,â he said slowly, âto not make things harder for you.â
Gabi frowned.
âYou didnât,â he said.
Nico let out a short, humorless laugh.
âYeah,â he murmured. âThatâs the problem.â
Something in Gabiâs chest tightened.
Because suddenlyâ
It was very clear they were talking about the same thing.
Had been, the whole time.
âYou think this was one-sided?â Gabi asked, voice quieter now.
Nico didnât answer.
Didnât have to.
Gabi shook his head, a disbelieving smile tugging at his mouth.
âUnbelievable,â he muttered.
Nico frowned slightly. âWhat?â
âYou really thought I didnât notice?â Gabi said.
âNotice what?â
âEverything.â
The word hung there.
Heavy.
Nicoâs jaw tightened.
âThatâs vague,â he said.
Gabi huffed a laugh.
âFine,â he said. âYou want specifics?â
He stepped closer again.
Close enough now that it felt different.
Not teammates.
Not just that.
âEvery time you stayed back in debrief longer than you needed to,â Gabi said. âEvery time you checked in after a bad race like it wasnât part of your job.â
Nico didnât move.
Didnât interrupt.
âEvery time you looked at me likeââ Gabi stopped himself, shaking his head.
âLike what?â Nico asked quietly.
Gabi met his gaze.
Held it.
âLike it wasnât just about racing.â
That did it.
Something shifted.
Subtle.
But unmistakable.
Nico exhaled slowly.
ââŠAnd youâre saying it wasnât,â he said.
âIâm saying it wasnât,â Gabi confirmed.
Silence.
Thenâ
A quiet, almost disbelieving breath from Nico.
âJesus,â he muttered.
Gabi huffed. âYeah.â
Another pause.
But this one felt different.
Less like avoidance.
More like standing at the edge of something.
Nico looked at him again.
Really looked this time.
âYou couldâve said something,â he said.
Gabi blinked.
âI couldâve?â he echoed.
Nico raised an eyebrow slightly. âYouâre not exactly subtle.â
Gabi let out a short laugh. âRight. Because youâre so easy to read.â
Nicoâs mouth twitched.
âFair.â
That tensionâ
It cracked.
Just enough.
Gabi took a breath.
Steadier now.
âSo what now?â he asked.
Nico hesitated.
Which, somehow, was more honest than anything else heâd done so far.
âI donât know,â he admitted.
Gabi nodded.
âOkay.â
Another pause.
Thenâ
âWe could start with not pretending it didnât happen,â Gabi offered.
Nico considered that.
Then nodded once.
âYeah,â he said. âThat sounds like a good start.â
Gabi smiled slightly.
Small.
But real.
âGood.â
They stood there for a second longer.
Close.
Not touching.
But not distant anymore, either.
Then Nico shifted.
Just slightly.
Closing the gap.
Not all the way.
But enough.
âYouâre going back to Monaco?â he asked.
Gabi nodded. âTomorrow.â
âRight.â
âAnd you?â
Nico shrugged lightly. âGermany. For a bit.â
Gabi hummed.
âOkay.â
Another pause.
Thenâ
âYou could come with me,â Nico said.
It slipped out like it surprised him too.
Gabi blinked.
ââŠWhat?â
Nico exhaled, running a hand through his hair.
âI meanânot right away,â he clarified. âBut⊠if you wanted. After.â
Gabi stared at him for a second.
Thenâ
He smiled.
Slow.
Soft.
âYeah,â he said. âIâd like that.â
Something in Nicoâs expression eased.
Not completely.
But enough.
âOkay,â he said.
And just like thatâ
It felt decided.
Not everything.
Not all at once.
But enough to move forward.
Gabi shifted his weight, glancing toward the exit again.
âI should actually go now,â he said.
âYeah,â Nico agreed.
Neither of them moved.
Again.
Gabi laughed quietly. âWeâre really bad at leaving.â
Nico huffed. âApparently.â
A beat.
Thenâ
Gabi stepped forward.
Closed the distance properly this time.
Close enough that there was no room left for doubt.
He hesitated for half a second.
Then leaned in.
The kiss was soft.
Careful.
Like something theyâd both been holding back for months and didnât want to break now that it was finally real.
All characters and real people depicted are fictionalized for storytelling purposes. No harm or offense is intended. Content may include mature themesâreader discretion advised.
Summary: As the group pauses in the dark to patch wounds and catch their breath, quiet moments of care begin to expose deeper fears none of them can ignore. In the aftermath of loss, fragile bonds strengthenâproving that survival isnât just about staying alive, but holding onto each other when everything else is slipping away.
The vehicles were parked nose-to-nose in the shadow of an abandoned roadside store, the broken signage above them creaking softly whenever the wind shifted. It wasnât much of a shelterâbarely even a stopâbut it was the first place since the garage where stopping hadnât immediately felt like a death sentence. The night had settled fully now, thick and quiet, wrapping around them in a way that felt both protective and suffocating.
No one had the energy to argue about it.
Engines had been cut. Lights kept low. Doors left cracked for quick escape.
And for the first time since the riverâsince the garageâthey were forced to sit with what had happened.
âAlright,â Lewis said after a long stretch of silence, his voice steady in a way that didnât quite reach his eyes. âWe need to check injuries. Everyone.â
There were no complaints.
Kimi was already moving, pulling what remained of their medical supplies from a worn bag that had seen better days. The zipper stuck halfway before he forced it open, revealing gauze, antiseptic wipes, tapeâless than theyâd had before the river. Everything damp at the edges despite their efforts to keep it dry.
âSit,â Max added, gesturing sharply to the group. âOne at a time.â
It turned into something structured out of necessity.
Carlos and Lewis worked on one side near the Suburban, while Kimi and Ollie took the truckâs tailgate, using it as a makeshift station. The metal was still warm from the engine, a small mercy against the creeping cold that had settled into their bones.
Ollie climbed up onto it slowly, wincing as he shifted his weight. The nausea hadnât fully gone awayânot since the dairy plant, not since that smell had lodged itself somewhere deep in his lungs. The river had only made it worse.
âYou good?â Kimi asked quietly, already laying out supplies.
Ollie nodded too quickly. âYeah. Fine.â
Kimi didnât call it out. Just handed him a strip of gauze. âHold that.â
They worked side by side, falling into a rhythm that didnât need much talking. Clean, wrap, move on. Hands brushing occasionally, steadying each other without making a thing of it.
Franco came first.
A scrape along his forearm, deeper than it looked under the grime. He hissed when the antiseptic hit, jerking slightly.
âSorry,â Ollie murmured automatically.
âItâs fine,â Franco said through clenched teeth. âBetter than⊠you know.â
He didnât finish.
None of them did that anymore.
Isack sat next, quieter, his hands shaking faintly as he tried to keep them still. Kimi noticed immediately, reaching out and steadying his wrist just long enough to help him breathe through it.
âYouâre okay,â Kimi said, simple, firm.
Isack nodded, swallowing hard. âYeah.â
Across from them, voices started to rise.
âStop moving your hand.â
âIâm not moving it.â
âYou are.â
âIâm literally notâMax, I swear toââ
âCharles.â
âI said Iâm notââ
âCharles.â
There was a pause.
Then, quieter but no less tense: âYouâre making it worse.â
Kimi didnât look up, but Ollie did, glancing toward the Suburban where Max had Charlesâs hand firmly in his grip, trying to clean the cut.
It didnât look bad.
That was the problem.
It looked manageable. Easy to ignore.
Which made it worse.
âItâs just a cut,â Charles insisted, though his voice had lost some of its edge. âYouâre acting likeââ
âItâs not just a cut,â Max snapped, sharper than intended. âYou were in that water. We donât know whatâs in it.â
A beat of silence followed.
Heavy.
âI know that,â Charles said, quieter now. âIâm not stupid.â
âI didnât say you were.â
âYou didnât have to.â
Max exhaled hard, running a hand through his hair before refocusing. âJustâlet me clean it properly.â
Charles didnât argue again.
But he didnât relax either.
Ollie looked away, something in his chest tightening at the exchange. It wasnât really about the cut. None of this was just about anything anymore.
Everything had layers now.
Fear stacked on fear.
Kimi nudged his arm lightly. âStay with me.â
Ollie blinked, refocusing. âYeah. Sorry.â
Oscar sat down next, shivering faintly despite the dry hoodie someone had handed him. His lips had regained some color, but not enough to be reassuring.
âCold?â Kimi asked.
Oscar let out a weak breath that mightâve been a laugh. âA bit.â
Ollie worked quickly, wrapping his wrist where the skin had split from earlier, his fingers careful but efficient. âYou need to keep warm,â he said, more serious than usual. âLike, actually warm. Not justââ he gestured vaguely at the hoodie.
âIâll manage.â
Lando appeared behind him almost immediately, like heâd been waiting for that cue. âHeâs sitting in the passenger seat. Heater on. Iâm driving now. No arguments.â
Oscar didnât fight it.
Didnât have the energy.
As he left, Lando lingered just long enough to press his hand briefly to Ollieâs shoulderâa silent thanksâbefore following.
The line thinned slowly.
Cuts wrapped. Scrapes cleaned. Hands steadied.
Until it was just them.
Kimi sat back slightly against the truck, flexing his fingers once, then again. They were stiff, raw at the knuckles from everything theyâd done that day. Everything theyâd touched.
Ollie stayed where he was, staring down at his hands.
For a while, neither of them spoke.
The quiet stretched.
Not uncomfortable.
Just⊠full.
âYou missed a spot,â Kimi said eventually, nodding toward a smear of dried blood along Ollieâs wrist.
Ollie huffed softly, reaching for a wipe. âYeah, well. Occupational hazard.â
Kimi watched him for a second longer than necessary. âYouâre shaking.â
âIâm not.â
âYou are.â
Ollie paused.
Looked down.
His hands were trembling faintly.
He let out a breath. âOkay. Maybe a little.â
Kimi didnât push.
Just shifted closer, shoulder brushing Ollieâs.
It helped.
More than Ollie wanted to admit.
They sat like that for a while, listening to the low murmur of the others, the occasional creak of the building behind them, the distant nothing of a world that had gone too quiet.
âI keep thinking about it,â Ollie said finally.
Kimi didnât ask what.
He didnât need to.
âThe garage,â Ollie clarified anyway, voice quieter now. âThe way he justââ He cut himself off, swallowing hard. âHe didnât even hesitate.â
Kimi stared out into the dark. âYeah.â
âI donât think I could do that.â
There it was.
Honest.
Raw.
âI donât think I could either,â Kimi admitted.
Ollie let out a shaky breath, something between relief and something heavier. âEveryone keeps acting like⊠like thatâs what weâre supposed to do now. Be ready toââ He made a vague gesture. âTrade ourselves in.â
âNo,â Kimi said immediately.
Ollie blinked, glancing at him.
âNo,â Kimi repeated, more firmly this time. âThatâs not the goal.â
âThen what is?â Ollie asked, the question slipping out sharper than he meant it to. âBecause it kind of feels like weâre just⊠waiting for our turn.â
The words hung there.
Too real.
Too close.
Kimi didnât answer right away.
He thought about it.
About everything theyâd lost. Everyone.
Yuki.
Others before him.
Now Lance.
The list was getting longer.
And they were still here.
âSurviving isnât the same as waiting to die,â Kimi said slowly.
Ollie looked unconvinced.
âIt doesnât feel that different.â
âI know,â Kimi admitted. âBut it is.â
âHow?â
Kimi turned to face him fully now. âBecause weâre still choosing things.â
Ollie frowned slightly. âLike what?â
âLike stopping here instead of pushing until we crash,â Kimi said. âLike treating injuries instead of ignoring them. Like staying together.â
Ollieâs gaze dropped. âThat doesnât stop people from dying.â
âNo,â Kimi said softly. âBut it means when they do⊠itâs not for nothing.â
Ollie let out a shaky breath, dragging a hand over his face. âIâm scared.â
There it was.
Simple.
Unfiltered.
Kimi didnât hesitate.
âI am too.â
Ollie shook his head slightly. âNo, I meanââ He struggled for the words. âI donât think Iâm going to make it.â
Kimiâs chest tightened at that.
âOllieââ
âIâm serious,â Ollie cut in, his voice thin but steady. âIâm not like Max, or Lewis, or even you. I panic. I freeze. Iââ He swallowed hard. âI almost didnât get out of that hotel. If you hadnâtââ
He stopped.
The memory catching.
âI keep thinking next time⊠there wonât be someone there.â
Kimi shifted closer.
Close enough that their shoulders pressed fully now.
âThere will be,â he said.
âYou donât know that.â
âNo,â Kimi admitted. âBut I know I will be.â
Ollie went still.
Kimi didnât look away. âYouâre not doing this alone.â
Something in Ollieâs expression cracked slightly.
âYou canât promise that,â he whispered.
âI can promise I wonât leave you,â Kimi replied.
It wasnât loud.
Wasnât dramatic.
But it landed.
Ollieâs eyes stung suddenly, and he blinked hard, looking away. âThatâs a stupid promise.â
âProbably,â Kimi said.
A faint, broken laugh escaped Ollie despite himself.
They sat in that for a moment.
Then Ollie leanedâjust slightlyâinto him.
Not much.
But enough.
Kimi didnât move away.
Didnât make it a thing.
Just stayed there.
Steady.
âYouâre gonna make it,â Kimi said after a while, quieter now.
Ollie shook his head, but there wasnât as much conviction in it this time.
âYeah,â he murmured. âMaybe.â
It wasnât belief.
Not yet.
But it was closer.
And for now, that was enough.
Across the lot, Max finally released Charlesâs hand.
âDone,â he said.
Charles flexed his fingers cautiously. âSee? Still attached.â
Max didnât smile. But the tension in his shoulders easedâjust a fraction.
âKeep it clean,â he said. âIf it gets worseââ
âI know.â
Another pause.
Then, softer: âThanks.â
Max nodded once.
The night stretched on around them, heavy but quieter now.
All characters and real people depicted are fictionalized for storytelling purposes. No harm or offense is intended. Content may include mature themesâreader discretion advised.
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Summary: When a desperate river crossing leaves them shaken, soaked, and questioning what survival is costing them, the group seeks refuge in the hollow darkness of an abandoned parking garageâonly to find that safety is an illusion. As one selfless act turns into an irreversible loss, the survivors are forced back onto the road toward Waco, carrying grief, guilt, and the growing fear that in this world, saving others may be the most dangerous choice of all.
Warnings: Death (Major), Near Drowning, Injury, Blood, Hypothermia Risk, Grief, Trauma, Panic, Emotional Distress, Arguments, Sacrifice
Word Count: 4.5k+
Prev. Chapter Next Chapter
Oct 22, 2025, 7:30 PM
The sky had turned a flat, oppressive gray long before they saw the river.
It wasnât the kind of gray that promised rain, or even changeâit was stagnant, unmoving, like the world had been painted over and forgotten. The air carried a damp chill that clung to skin and fabric alike, and a thin mist had begun to gather low to the ground, curling through the grass and around the tires of their vehicles as they rolled forward.
Lewis noticed it first.
âWeâre not getting through up ahead,â he said over the radio, his voice cutting through the low murmur of the group. It wasnât panicâLewis rarely let himself sound like thatâbut there was something firm in it. Certain.
Oscar slowed the truck gradually rather than slamming the brakes, the engine giving a soft protest as it idled down. âWhat is it?â he asked, already leaning forward to try and see past the hazy stretch of land ahead.
Then the road dipped.
And disappeared.
The river wasnât supposed to be thereânot like this. It had been marked on their maps, yes, a thin winding line cutting across their route, something manageable. Something you could drive across with a shallow crossing, maybe a bridge.
But thisâ
This wasnât a river anymore.
It had swallowed the land around it.
Water stretched wide and uneven, bleeding far past its original banks, flooding the surrounding terrain until road and earth were indistinguishable beneath the murky surface. The current was slow, deceptively so, but thick with debrisâbranches, twisted metal, scraps of what mightâve once been parts of vehicles.
And bodies.
No one said it at first, but they all saw them.
Half-submerged shapes drifting just beneath the surface, caught on rocks or tangled in the reeds. Some were still. Some werenât.
The engine cut completely, and the sudden silence felt heavier than the sound had.
âWell,â Lando said after a moment, his voice quieter than usual. âThatâs⊠not ideal.â
No one laughed.
Back in the suburban, Max shifted in his seat, his jaw tightening as he studied the water. âWeâre not driving through that.â
âObviously,â Charles muttered, though his gaze hadnât left the river. There was something uneasy in his posture, something that hadnât been there before.
George leaned forward slightly, squinting. âHow deep do you think it is?â
âDeep enough,â Carlos replied.
That much was clear. Even from a distance, they could see how the water movedânot rushing, not shallow. It rolled in slow, heavy currents, disturbed only by whatever it carried along with it.
Oscar swallowed hard, thumb flicking the button on the radio. âWe donât have another route, do we?â
Silence answered him.
Because they all knew the truth.
Turning around meant losing time they didnât have. It meant burning through more fuel, risking running into something worse. It meant⊠uncertainty.
Everything was uncertainty now, but this? This was immediate.
Lewis exhaled slowly. âWe cross on foot,â he said.
That got reactions.
âOn foot?â Franco echoed from the truck bed, his voice rising slightly. âThrough that?â
âWe donât have a choice,â Lewis said, leaning out the window.
âThereâs always a choice,â Isack muttered, though it didnât sound like he believed it.
Max pushed the door open, stepping out into the damp air. The others followed out of the truck and suburban, boots hitting the ground with dull, heavy thuds. The mist curled around their legs as they moved closer to the waterâs edge, each step feeling more deliberate than the last.
Up close, it was worse.
The smell hit first.
Rotten. Stagnant. Thick enough that it seemed to coat the back of their throats. It wasnât just waterâit was decay, steeped into everything. Oscar instinctively pulled his sleeve up over his nose, but it didnât help much.
âJesus,â he breathed.
Lando grimaced beside him. âYeah.â
A body drifted closer to the edge, caught briefly against a cluster of debris. Its skin had gone pale in that unnatural way, bloated slightly, the features just distorted enough to make it hard to look at for too long.
Then it moved.
Not much. Just a twitch. A slow, unnatural shift.
Franco took a step back immediately. âNope,â he said. âNoâno, weâre notââ
âItâs stuck,â Max cut in, though his voice was tight. âItâs not getting out.â
That didnât make it better.
Kimi crouched slightly near the edge, picking up a long branch and nudging at the water. The surface rippled, disturbing the thin layer of debris floating across it.
âCurrentâs slow,â he said. âBut itâs moving.â
âMeaning?â Ollie asked.
âMeaning if something slipsâŠâ Kimi didnât finish the sentence.
He didnât have to.
Lando crossed his arms, staring out at the opposite side. It wasnât that far. Maybe twenty, thirty meters at most. Close enough that it felt doable.
Far enough that it didnât.
âWe go together,â Lewis said. âNo one breaks off. We keep contact the whole way.â
âAnd the vehicles?â Liam asked.
Carlos shook his head slightly. âWe leave them.â
That landed heavily.
Vehicles had meant safety. Speed. Distance.
Now they were just⊠dead weight.
Oscar glanced back at the truck for a moment, then back at the water. âWhat about supplies?â
âWe carry what we can,â Lewis said. âThe rest⊠we lose.â
Another silence.
There was no argument this time.
Because againâno one had a better option.
Max stepped closer to the edge, testing the ground with his boot before stepping into the water.
It soaked through instantly.
âCold,â he muttered.
That was an understatement.
Even from where they stood, they could see the way his body tensed at the contact. The water reached just above his ankles, dark fabric immediately clinging to his legs.
âAlright,â he said after a second. âSlow. Watch your footing.â
One by one, they followed.
The first step was the worst.
Lando hissed under his breath as the cold hit, sharp and biting, seeping through his shoes and up his legs in seconds. It felt wrongâtoo cold, too heavy, like the water was pulling at him already.
âGod,â he muttered.
Oscar stepped in beside him, his breath catching slightly. âYeah. Thatâsâyeah.â
The ground beneath the water wasnât solid. It shifted under their weight, uneven and slick with algae. Every step had to be placed carefully, tested before committing.
âStay close,â Lewis reminded them.
They formed a loose line, close enough that they could reach each other if needed, but spaced just enough to avoid dragging someone else down if one of them slipped.
The water climbed higher with each step.
Ankles to calves.
Calves to knees.
By the time they were halfway to where the road had dipped beneath the surface, it was pressing against their thighs, the current more noticeable nowânot strong, but persistent.
And the bodiesâ
They were closer now.
Too close.
One drifted past Landoâs side, brushing lightly against his leg. He jerked instinctively, his breath hitching as he stumbled slightly.
âHeyâhey, easy,â Oscar said quickly, reaching out to steady him.
âIâm fine,â Lando said, though his voice was tight. âIâmâfine.â
But his grip on Oscarâs arm didnât loosen right away.
Behind them, Franco was breathing too fast.
âI donât like this,â he said. âI donât like this at all.â
âNone of us do,â Carlos replied, not unkindly.
Another step.
Then another.
The mist hung thicker over the water, curling around them, obscuring the edges of the world until it felt like the river was all there was.
And thenâ
Isack slipped.
It happened fast.
One second he was steady, the next his foot went out from under him, the algae-slick ground offering no resistance as he dropped hard into the water with a sharp splash.
âIsack!â Franco shouted.
The current caught him immediatelyânot dragging him far, but enough. Enough that his balance was gone, that his arms flailed as he tried to push himself back up.
âGrab him!â Lewis snapped.
Franco lunged forward without thinking, reaching for Isackâs armâ
âand his own footing gave way.
They both went down.
Water surged, splashing high, breaking the fragile stillness of the river. One of the nearby bodies shifted violently in response, bumping into another with a sickening sound.
âShitâ!â Max moved first, pushing forward through the water with force, George right behind him.
Isackâs head dipped under for a secondâjust a secondâbut it was enough to send a shock of panic through the group.
âGet upâget up!â Franco was shouting, but he was half-submerged himself now, slipping, unable to get traction.
George reached them first, grabbing Isack by the back of his jacket and hauling him upward with a sharp, controlled motion. Max grabbed Francoâs arm, dragging him upright just as he started to go under again.
âStop fighting it!â Max snapped. âYouâre making it worse!â
They steadied them, holding them in place until their footing returnedâuntil the panic eased just enough to function.
Isack coughed hard, water spilling from his mouth as he sucked in a ragged breath. Franco clung to Georgeâs arm like it was the only solid thing left in the world.
For a moment, no one moved.
No one spoke.
The river seemed louder now, even though it hadnât changed.
âEveryone good?â Lewis asked, his voice cutting through the chaos.
A series of shaky nods.
âThen we keep moving,â he said.
Because stopping wasnât an option.
Not here.
Not now.
They moved again, but something had changed.
The rhythm theyâd found in those first careful steps was gone, replaced by something sharper, more fragile. Every movement now carried the memory of Isack slipping under, of Francoâs panic, of how quickly control could be ripped away. The river didnât feel like something they were crossing anymoreâit felt like something they were inside of, something that could swallow them if it decided to.
âSlow,â Lewis reminded, though his voice had dropped even lower, like he didnât want to disturb the air.
Isack was breathing hard, still coughing intermittently as he steadied himself. Franco stayed close to him now, one hand gripping the back of his jacket like he was afraid to let go again.
âYou good?â Franco asked, voice tight.
Isack nodded too quickly. âYeah. Yeah, Iâm fine.â
He wasnât.
None of them were.
Max stayed just behind them, watchful, his eyes flicking constantly between the ground and the water around them. George had gone quieter than usual, his expression unreadable as he scanned ahead, every movement precise, almost mechanical.
âDonât rush,â Carlos said. âWeâre almost halfway.â
That should have been reassuring.
It wasnât.
Because halfway meant there was still just as much left.
The water climbed higher as they moved forward, reaching their hips now in the lowest dips of the flooded road. Their clothes clung heavy and cold, dragging at their movements, every step requiring more effort than the last.
Oscar sucked in a sharp breath as a deeper patch caught him off guard, water sloshing up to his waist. âShitââ
Lando immediately reached out, grabbing his arm. âCareful.â
âIâm good,â Oscar said, though his teeth had started to chatter faintly.
Lando didnât let go right away.
The cold was sinking deeper now, past the surface discomfort into something more dangerous. Muscles stiffened. Fingers numbed. The kind of cold that didnât just make you shiverâit slowed you down.
âWe need to keep moving,â Lewis said. âDonât stop.â
As if they would.
A shape bumped against Georgeâs leg.
He didnât react at firstâjust looked down slowly, his gaze following the pale, distorted outline drifting past him. It turned slightly in the water, just enough that he could see its face.
Or what was left of it.
His jaw tightened, but he didnât say anything. Didnât move away.
âGeorge,â Alex said quietly from a few steps behind him.
George blinked once, like he was pulling himself back into his body. âIâm fine.â
It didnât sound convincing.
But they didnât have the space to push.
Another few steps.
The current tugged slightly stronger here, enough to shift their balance if they werenât careful. The debris thickened tooâbranches, scraps of fabric, pieces of things that used to be useful, now just obstacles.
And thenâ
Charles hissed sharply.
âAhâshit.â
Heads turned immediately.
âWhat happened?â Carlos asked.
Charles had pulled his hand up out of the water, clutching it instinctively. Blood mixed instantly with the murky current, thin red threads curling away from his fingers.
âCut,â he said, his voice tight. âSomething sharp under the water.â
âLet me see,â Lewis said, already moving closer.
âItâs not deep,â Charles insisted, though he didnât sound entirely sure.
Lewis grabbed his wrist gently but firmly, turning his hand to inspect it. The cut wasnât massive, but it was open enoughâjagged, probably from metal or broken glass hidden beneath the surface.
And the waterâ
The water wasnât clean.
A silence fell again, heavier this time.
âThatâs not good,â Liam muttered.
âNo,â Lewis agreed.
Charles swallowed. âItâs fine. Itâs just a cut.â
âIn that?â Max said, gesturing to the water around them.
Charles didnât answer.
Because he knew.
They all did.
âInfection risk,â Oscar said quietly.
âThatâs putting it lightly,â Lando added.
Lewis exhaled slowly, then released Charlesâ hand. âWe clean it as soon as weâre out,â he said. âProperly. For now, keep it out of the water if you can.â
Charles let out a humorless laugh. âYeah. Iâll just⊠float it above the surface, shall I?â
âNo sarcasm,â Carlos snapped, sharper than intended.
That was new.
Everyone felt it.
Charlesâs expression hardened slightly. âIâm just sayingââ
âWe donât have time for this,â Carlos cut in. âWe deal with it when weâre across.â
âWhen weâre across,â Charles repeated, something strained in his voice.
The words hung there.
When.
Not if.
But it didnât feel guaranteed anymore.
George shifted slightly, his gaze still fixed ahead. âWe should keep moving,â he said.
His voice was flat.
Too flat.
Alex glanced at him, something uneasy flickering across his face, but he didnât push. Not here.
Not now.
They moved.
Step by step, forcing themselves forward through water that felt heavier with every passing second. The far bank was closer nowâvisibly soâbut it didnât feel like it.
Because something else was wrong.
âWait,â Lando said suddenly.
Everyone stilled.
âWhat?â Max asked.
Lando turned slightly, scanning the water around them. âTheyâre moving.â
âTheyâve been moving,â Oscar said quietly.
âNo,â Lando said, shaking his head. âNot like that.â
And then they saw it.
The bodies in the water werenât just drifting anymore.
They were⊠shifting.
Subtle at firstâsmall, almost imperceptible movements. A hand twitching. A shoulder rolling slightly beneath the surface. A head turning just a fraction too deliberately.
âTheyâre reacting,â Lewis said under his breath.
âTo us,â Carlos finished.
A low, sickening realization settled over the group.
The splashing.
The noise.
Theyâd disturbed the water.
And nowâ
A body jerked suddenly, its arm breaking the surface in a slow, unnatural motion.
Franco let out a strangled sound. âNopeânope, no, we need to goânow.â
âStay together!â Max barked.
But the tension had snapped.
Panic was threading through them again, sharper this time, more dangerous. Their steps grew less controlled, more hurried, water splashing louder with every movement.
âStop rushing!â Lewis snapped. âYouâll fallââ
As if on cue, Liam stumbled, catching himself just in time before going under. The ripple of movement sent another wave through the water, disturbing more of the bodies around them.
âTheyâre waking up,â Isack said, his voice thin.
âKeep moving,â Carlos said. âJust keep moving.â
But the far bankâ
It wasnât getting closer fast enough.
Max stopped.
âWait.â
Everyone froze.
âWhat?â Oscar asked, breathless.
Max was staring ahead, his expression tightening. âLook.â
They followed his gaze.
The terrain aheadâthe place where the road should have risen out of the waterâwas worse than they thought. The flooding hadnât just spread outwardâit had deepened.
The drop wasnât gradual.
It was sudden.
A dark, deeper stretch of water lay between them and the bank, the surface almost still, but wrong. Too dark. Too deep.
âHow deep?â Lando asked.
George nudged forward slightly, testing with his foot.
He didnât find the bottom.
His expression shiftedâjust slightly, but enough.
ââŠToo deep,â he said.
Silence.
âWe canât swim that,â Franco said immediately.
âNot like this,â Isack added, panic rising again.
âWith the current, the debrisââ Alex shook his head. âNo way.â
Carlos ran a hand through his wet hair, frustration breaking through. âWeâre too far in to turn back.â
âAre we?â Charles shot back, his voice sharper now.
Carlos turned on him. âYou want to go back through that?â
âI donât want to drown in front of it!â Charles snapped.
âEnough,â Lewis cut in, but the damage was already done.
The tension that had been building since they stepped into the water finally broke.
âWe shouldâve found another route,â Charles said, his voice tight with frustrationâand fear.
âThere wasnât one,â Carlos fired back.
âThereâs always another way!â
âAnd waste more time? More fuel? Run into something worse?â
âAt least we wouldnât be stuck in a river full of infected corpses!â
âThatâs enough!â Max snapped.
But it wasnât.
Because this wasnât just about the river.
It was everything.
The exhaustion. The fear. The losses piling up with no time to process them.
Yuki.
Now this.
âWe turn back,â Lewis said finally.
The words landed heavy.
Decisive.
Final.
No one argued.
Because as much as they hated itâ
There was no other choice.
âCarefully,â he added. âWe donât rush. We do this properly.â
The way back felt longer.
Harder.
And the river didnât feel like it was going to let them go easily.
The first thing anyone noticed about the parking garage wasnât the darkness.
It was the echo.
Their enginesâwhat little they dared useâbounced off the concrete like something alive, like the structure itself was answering them back. The Suburban rolled in first, its headlights cutting shallow tunnels through the gloom, while the truck followed close behind, tires crunching over broken glass and something softer no one wanted to identify. The air inside was cooler than outside, but it wasnât relief. It was stale, unmoving, thick with the kind of silence that made every breath feel like an intrusion.
Max killed the engine first.
The sudden quiet rang louder than the noise.
For a moment, no one moved.
They had made it out of the river. That alone felt like something fragile, something that might break if acknowledged too loudly. Every piece of clothing clung to skin, soaked through and heavy, the chill settling deeper now that the adrenaline had ebbed. Oscarâs hands were still trembling faintly where they rested in his lap, his knuckles pale, lips tinged faintly blue despite how he tried to hide it.
âWe donât stay long,â Lewis said quietly from the back, his voice measured, controlled in a way that made it clear he was forcing it. âJust enough to dry off. Regroup.â
No one argued.
They couldnât.
The group spilled out slowly, movements stiff, exhausted. Shoes squelched against concrete, leaving damp prints behind them like a trail they couldnât erase. The smell hit them thenâoil, rot, something metallic beneath it allâand it turned stomachs already too close to empty.
Charles flexed his hand the second he stepped out, the cut across his palm reopening slightly with the motion. The sight of diluted blood mixing with river water made something twist low in his chest, sharp and quiet. He didnât say anything. Just wiped it against his already ruined hoodie and flexed again, slower this time.
They moved deeper in, instinctively huddling closer despite the open space.
George stayed near Franco and Isack, his presence solid but distant. He hadnât said much since the river. Not since dragging Franco out, not since the moment everything could have gone very differently. His silence wasnât emptyâit was heavy, like something compressing inward.
Lando stuck close to Oscar, one hand brushing his arm every few seconds like a grounding check. Oscar didnât pull away. Didnât lean in either. Just existed in that narrow space between.
âWeâll take second level,â Max decided, scanning upward into the spiraling dark. âLess exposed.â
âOr more trapped,â Carlos muttered, but he followed anyway.
The climb up the ramp felt longer than it should have. Every step echoed. Every small noise stretched too far. By the time they reached the second level, the group had tightened unconsciously, shoulders brushing, breaths syncing in a way that came from shared fear more than intention.
They chose a corner.
Not because it was safeânothing felt safe anymoreâbut because it felt defensible. Fewer angles. Fewer unknowns.
Lewis and Carlos worked quietly to block part of the entrance with an overturned cart and debris. It wouldnât stop anything determined, but it might slow it. Might give them seconds. And seconds mattered now more than anything.
Lance was the one who found the noise trap.
It was half-buried under debrisâa cluster of cans wired loosely together, something crude but effective. Someone elseâs attempt at survival. Someone else who wasnât here anymore.
âStill works,â Lance said after testing it gently, the faint clink echoing too loudly in the space.
Max looked over immediately. âDonât set it off.â
âI wonât,â Lance replied, but there was something in his tone. Thoughtful. Quiet in a different way.
They settled.
Or tried to.
Wet clothes were wrung out as best as possible, laid over anything remotely clean. Hands shookânot just from cold now, but from everything stacked on top of everything else. Hunger gnawed. Exhaustion pressed down. The kind that made thoughts slow and heavy.
For a moment, it almost felt still.
Then the sound came.
Distant at first.
A scrape.
Then another.
Everyone froze.
Heads turned toward the ramp.
The sound came again, louder now. Not random. Not drifting.
Moving.
âShit,â Ollie breathed.
Max was already on his feet. âLights off.â
The dim glow vanished instantly, plunging them into near-total darkness. Only the faint grey from the outside filtered in, barely enough to make shapes of each other.
The sound multiplied.
Scraping. Shuffling. Something dragging.
More than one.
âThey followed us,â George said, voice low, flat.
âNo,â Lewis murmured. âThey tracked us.â
The difference hung in the air.
Closer now.
Too close.
Maxâs voice cut through, sharp and quiet. âWe leave. Now.â
âBut the carsââ Isack started.
âWeâll draw them,â Lance said suddenly.
It was so calm it almost didnât register.
Everyone turned.
âWhat?â Lando snapped.
âThe trap,â Lance continued, already moving, already thinking it through out loud. âSet it off on the upper level. Pull them up. You drive out while theyâre distracted.â
âNo,â Esteban said immediately.
âItâll work.â
âItâs not happening.â
âItâs the only thing that will.â
Silence slammed down hard.
Even the sounds from below seemed to pause for a second, like the world itself was waiting.
Max stepped forward. âWe go together.â
âIf we all go, they follow all of us,â Lance replied, meeting his gaze. âYou know that.â
Oscar shook his head, sharp and immediate. âNo. No, we figure something else outââ
âThere isnât time,â Lance cut in, not harsh, just certain.
Charles swallowed hard. âLanceââ
âListen,â Lance said, softer now, looking at all of them. âYouâre soaked. Half of you can barely stand. If they get hereââ He didnât finish. He didnât have to.
Landoâs hand tightened into a fist. âWeâre not leaving you.â
âYou wonât be,â Lance said, and for a second, something almost like a smile flickered. âIâll be right behind you.â
It was a lie.
Everyone knew it.
That was the worst part.
Lewis stepped forward slowly. âThere are other ways.â
Lance shook his head. âNot fast enough.â
The scraping below grew louder again.
Closer.
Decision time shrinking to nothing.
Maxâs jaw tightened. His eyes flicked to the ramp, then back to Lance.
âNo,â he said again, but it wasnât as firm.
Lance reached out, gripping his shoulder briefly. âGet them out.â
Something in Maxâs expression crackedânot outwardly, not fullyâbut enough.
Pierre swore under his breath, turning away like he couldnât watch this play out.
âOscar,â Lance said quietly, stepping toward him. âStay close to Lando.â
Oscarâs throat tightened. He nodded anyway.
Lance looked at each of them once. Not lingering. Just enough.
Then he turned.
And ran.
âLANCEââ someone shouted, but it was already too late.
His footsteps pounded down the ramp, loud on purpose now. Drawing attention. Drawing everything.
The trap went off seconds later.
The clatter exploded through the garage, sharp and violent, echoing endlessly.
The response was immediate.
The infected surged.
The sound of movement became a floodâscraping, dragging, bodies colliding, drawn toward the noise like it was oxygen.
âGO!â Max shouted.
Everything broke into motion.
They sprinted.
Down the opposite ramp, toward the cars, toward anything that wasnât this.
Behind them, the noise didnât stop.
It got worse.
They didnât look back.
They couldnât.
The Suburban roared to life first, engine screaming in the enclosed space. The truck followed seconds later, Oscar practically throwing himself into the driverâs seat.
âWhere is he?!â Isack shouted from the truck bed, bracing himself.
No one answered.
Because they knew.
Max floored it.
The vehicles tore out of the garage, tires screeching, bursting into the open air like breaking through the surface of water.
The night outside felt too wide.
Too empty.
They didnât stop driving.
Not for a long time.
No one spoke for miles.
The road stretched ahead in a dull, endless line, the sky above a flat, oppressive grey even as evening deepened. The Suburbanâs interior felt smaller now, tighter, filled with something unspoken and suffocating.
Pierre sat curled slightly into himself, hands tucked into his sleeves despite the damp. Estebanâs arm was around him, firm, steady, not letting go.
Carlos stared out the window, jaw clenched so tight it ached.
Lewis sat forward, elbows on his knees, eyes unfocused.
Max drove like he was on autopilot. Precise. Mechanical.
Charles kept flexing his injured hand without realizing it.
Max didnât look away from the road.
In the truck bed, Franco and Isack sat in stunned silence.
Finally, Lando broke.
âHe said heâd be right behind us.â
The words were quiet. Fragile.
No one answered.
âDid you hear him?â Lando continued, voice tightening. âHe saidââ
âI heard him,â Oscar said.
Flat.
Final.
Landoâs jaw clenched. âSo why didnât we wait?â
âBecause if we had, weâd all be dead,â Oscar replied.
The words hit hard.
Too hard.
âThat wasnât Maxâs call to make!â Lando snapped.
âIt was,â Oscar shot back. âSomeone had to make it.â
âNot like thatââ
âLike what?â Oscarâs voice rose now, sharp, cutting. âLike hesitating? Like getting everyone killed because we couldnât move?â
âBecause we couldnât leave him!â
Silence exploded in the wake of that.
Heavy.
Raw.
âHe chose it,â Kimi said quietly.
Lando shook his head immediately. âThat doesnât make it okay.â
âNo,â Kimi agreed. âIt doesnât.â
Oscar shifted slightly, a hand moving towards Landoâs. âHe knew,â he murmured. âHe knew what he was doing.â
âThat doesnât make it okay,â Lando repeated, softer now.
No one argued that.
Because it wasnât.
But it had still happened.
The road stretched on.
Waco was somewhere ahead.
And behind them, in a dark, echoing garage, Lance Stroll had made a choice none of them would ever forget.
They didnât stop until the sky darkened fully.
Even then, it wasnât really a stop. Just a slow down. A reluctant pause in a world that didnât allow them much of either.
The grief sat with them.
Quiet.
Persistent.
Unavoidable.
And heavier than anything theyâd carried so far.
All characters and real people depicted are fictionalized for storytelling purposes. No harm or offense is intended. Content may include mature themesâreader discretion advised.