As I pulled the motorbike away from the chaos of the parking lot, the wind whipped through my hair, carrying with it the acrid smell of smoke and something far worse.
But I couldnât leave without one last look back.
What I saw made me slam on the brakes so hard the bike nearly skidded out from under me. There, emerging from the same gate weâd used, was Tobias leading what looked like the entire remaining students of Lexington Charter School. Fifteen-plus people moved together in a desperate cluster, their makeshift weapons glintingâcrowbars, kitchen knives, broken chair legs, anything they could get their hands on.
They were making a catastrophic mistake.
The sheer size of their group was like a dinner bell to the Infected. Every footstep, every whispered instruction, every involuntary gasp of fear combined into a symphony of noise that drew the creatures like sharks to blood. Already, I could see shadows moving between the parked cars, converging on their position with that terrifying single-minded purpose.
But despite the terror etched on their facesâTobias and the others seemed determined.
"Hey!" I called out.
Tobias spun toward me, his eyes widening as he spotted my lone figure on the motorcycle.
Without hesitation, I pulled the Directorâs key fob from my pocket and hurled it through the air. The small device tumbled end over end, catching the light from a flickering streetlamp before landing perfectly in Tobiasâs outstretched palm.
No words were exchanged. None were needed. I gave him a sharp nodâpart farewell, part good luckâand gunned the engine.
The motorcycle lurched forward with more force than Iâd expected, nearly throwing me backward as I left the parking lot behind. The last thing I saw in my rearview mirror was Tobias raising the key fob to rally his group, their faces a mixture of hope and terror as they prepared for what might be their final sprint.
Lexington Charter School shrank behind me, its imposing brick facade now just another monument to a world that no longer existed. It was hard to believe Iâd spent less than twenty-four hours in that place.
Ahead of me, the road split into two directions. I could just make out the taillights of Sydneyâs and Miss Ivyâs cars disappearing down the eastern route, but even from here I could see the problem. The cars had attracted a significant following of Infected, and the creatures were spreading across that entire section of road like spilled ink. On a motorcycle, trying to navigate through that crowd would be suicideâone wrong move, one moment of lost balance, and Iâd become just another meal for the endless hunger that had consumed the city.
Iâd have to find another way.
Taking the western fork, I began a wide circuit around the area, hoping to loop back and rejoin the others once Iâd put some distance between myself and the immediate danger. The motorcycle responded better than Iâd expected, though I could feel my inexperience with every turn. This was only my second time on a bike, and the learning curve in an apocalypse was brutal and unforgiving.
As I rode deeper into what had once been the greatest city in the world, the full scope of our catastrophe became undeniably clear.
New York City stretched out before me like a vision of hell.
Street lights flickered intermittently or had gone dark entirely, leaving vast swaths of the metropolis shrouded in an unnatural twilight. Cars sat abandoned in the middle of intersections, their doors hanging open like screaming mouths, some still running with no one left to drive them. The iconic yellow taxi cabs that had once been the cityâs arteries now served as obstacles and hiding places for creatures that had once been their drivers and passengers.
Windows in the towering skyscrapers were shattered, dark, or flickering with the orange glow of fires that no one would come to extinguish. From some of those broken windows, I could see shapes movingâsilhouettes of the Infected who had been trapped in offices and apartments when the outbreak began, still wandering their familiar spaces in a grotesque parody of their former routines.
The sounds were perhaps the worst part. The city that never slept now moaned and groaned with a completely different kind of insomnia.
Behind me, growing fainter but still audible, came the sounds from Lexington Charter School. Shouts, crashes, the unmistakable sound of improvised weapons meeting flesh. I forced myself not to look back again, not to count the screams of students.
I knew the mathematics of survival, and fifteen people moving together in a world like this... the odds werenât good.
I navigated around an overturned city bus, its windows spider-webbed with cracks and its interior dark with stains I didnât want to examine. Through the wreckage, I caught glimpses of Times Square in the distanceâor what remained of it. The massive electronic billboards still flickered sporadically, advertising products that no one would ever buy again to people who might not exist anymore.
This had been my home for most of my life. These streets had witnessed my childhood, my teenage years. Iâd walked these sidewalks thousands of times, never imagining that one day Iâd be racing through them on a stolen motorcycle, dodging the reanimated corpses of people I might have crossed..
This wasnât just the end of my worldâit was the end of
the
world. If New York City, with all its resources and population, had fallen this completely, what hope did anywhere else have? Los Angeles? Chicago? London? Tokyo? Were there still pockets of civilization holding out somewhere, or had the infection spread across the globe like wildfire?
Even if there were safe havens somewhere, how would we reach them? Every airport would be overrun, every train station a death trap. The highways would be clogged with abandoned vehicles and wandering hordes. The infrastructure that had once connected the world had become a network of distribution for a plague that turned humanity against itself.
But even more pressing than the global implications was a problem much closer to home.
The Dullahan virus.
The infection that Rachel, Elena, and I carried made us different from the others in ways we were still discovering. We were walking targets, danger personified to anyone who stayed near us.
But how could we abandon the others? How could I ask Rachel to leave Rebecca behind, or Elena to part from her sister?
Yet every moment we stayed with them, we put them at greater risk. Every Infected that found us because of what weâd become was a potential death sentence for people we cared about.
Was there even a way out of this nightmare?
The rational part of my mindâthe part that had somehow kept me alive through impossible oddsâinsisted there had to be. Somewhere in this vast, interconnected world, there had to be pockets of safety, groups of survivors whoâd found a way to push back against the tide of death that had swept across civilization. But the pessimistic voice that grew stronger with each passing hour whispered darker truths: maybe this was it.
In any normal crisis, there would be informationânews reports, government announcements, social media updates from around the globe. But now? The infrastructure that had once connected eight billion people had crumbled along with everything else. We were flying blind through an apocalypse, making life-or-death decisions based on fragments of knowledge and desperate hope.
Who were our enemies beyond the obvious shambling hordes? Were there other survivors whoâd turned predatory, taking advantage of civilizationâs collapse to prey on the weak? Government remnants trying to contain the situation through brutal martial law? And more unsettling stillâwere there allies we didnât know about? Military units still maintaining order somewhere? Scientists working on a cure? International coalitions coordinating rescue efforts?
The not knowing was almost worse than the constant threat of death. At least when facing an Infected, you understood the rules: run, hide, or fight.
And then there was the stark reality of our situation: we were refugees now, perpetually running with no clear destination. The idea of fleeing every single day, never knowing if the next town or city would offer sanctuary or just another flavor of hell, felt unsustainable. How long could we keep this up? How long before exhaustion, despair, or simple bad luck caught up with us?
While these dark thoughts churned through my mind, the familiar sound of car engines reached my ears over the motorcycleâs steady rumble. I twisted the throttle and accelerated, weaving between abandoned vehicles and debris until I spotted the blessed sight of our convoy ahead: Sydneyâs compact car leading the way, followed by Miss Ivyâs car, both cars moving steadily along what appeared to be a main highway leading away from the cityâs dying heart.
I felt relieved.
Theyâd made it out. They were alive. For now, that was enough.
"Hey!" Christopherâs voice cut through the wind as his face appeared at Sydneyâs passenger window, his expression breaking into a smile. "Where the hell did you find a motorbike?!"
"In the parking lot," I called back.
"Donât you want to get in the car?" Alishaâs concerned face joined Christopherâs at the window. "Itâs safer to be inside than riding exposed like that."
She had a point. On the bike, I was vulnerable to anythingâstray Infected, road debris, other survivors with questionable intentions, or simply losing control and becoming roadkill. But there were advantages too that I didnât want to give up just yet.
"Iâll stick with the bike for now," I decided. "Itâs got fuel, and the mobility might come in handy. Plus, if we get separated or need a scout, this thing can go places the cars canât."
What I didnât say was that the motorcycle also gave me optionsâthe ability to draw threats away from the group if necessary, or to make a quick escape if my Dullahan-infected status put the others in danger.
"Okay, but be careful," Alisha said.
I nodded.
"By the way," I called out as we continued our steady progress away from the urban nightmare behind us, "where exactly are we going?"
It was a fair question. We were fleeing New York Cityâprobably the smartest decision weâd made in daysâbut fleeing toward what? Just driving aimlessly until we ran out of gas didnât seem like much of a survival strategy.
"Weâre still figuring it out," Alisha replied, glancing back toward Miss Ivyâs car. "But somewhere with a lot fewer people than New York. That much we know for sure."
"Yeah, definitely," I chuckled, though there wasnât much humor in it. "I think we can safely say that New York ranks pretty high on the list of worst possible places to be when a zombie apocalypse breaks out."
"So whatâs the plan?" I pressed. "Miss Ivy must have some ideasâshe seems to know these roads pretty well."
"She mentioned a town," Alisha said. "Somewhere about two or three hours from here. Small place, not too many people originally, which means..."
"Fewer potential Infected," I finished. "Smart thinking."
Two to three hours.
But a small town did make sense. The mathematics of survival were brutal but clear: fewer original inhabitants meant fewer potential threats now.
Well, we will see once we get there.