Chapter 10: Sydney
In the shadow of the gymnasium building, the car remained untouched by the chaos unfolding nearby. The infected, drawn by the relentless beat of loud music, had congregated away from our location, their attention completely diverted. The phone, miraculously, still had a substantial amount of battery left, continuing to blast the music that kept us safe for the moment.
Sydney, crouching carefully, moved ahead with a cautious grace. Her eyes scanned the area as she turned to me. “What is that lame music?” She asked.
I followed closely behind, ensuring my steps were as silent as possible. “I put it on to draw their attention away from me and Emily,” I explained.
Sydney glanced back at me, an eyebrow raised. “Hm, quite smart, aren’t you? I guess if she’s still alive, it’s thanks to you?”
I shrugged modestly, not wanting to take all the credit. “We helped each other,” I replied.
Sydney’s next question caught me completely off guard. “Did you fuck her?” She asked bluntly.
My cheeks flushed a deep red, and I stumbled over my words. “W-What?!”
Seeing my reaction, Sydney smirked. “Bullseye, huh?”
“No, we didn’t!” I insisted, my voice cracking slightly under the pressure of her gaze.
“And that underwear you had, must be hers as well?” She continued, her eyes narrowing as she pieced together the puzzle.
“No, I’m telling you—” I began, but she cut me off with a dismissive wave of her hand.
“It doesn’t matter,” she said, though it was clear she was convinced of her own conclusion.
Feeling a mix of embarrassment and frustration, I muttered awkwardly, “Just don’t tell anyone… It happened when we thought we were going to die. She has a boyfriend, so—”
Sydney’s expression softened slightly, and she asked, “What’s your name already?”
“Ryan,” I replied.
“Ryan,” she repeated, as if testing the sound of it. “Do you really think you’re going to see Emily again?”
I hesitated, unsure of how to respond. “I mean… why not?” I asked, though doubt crept into my voice.
Sydney let out a sigh, her expression turning serious. “Liam is planning to get out of New York with the cars they’ve gathered. Your girlfriend will be leaving with them, so you likely won’t see her unless you have a means to track her.”
“Emily is not my girlfriend…” I corrected her, though I understood the sentiment behind her words.
If they were going to leave the city, I had no idea where they might be headed. They would just run away, trying to find a safe place out of the infected’s reach—if such a place even existed.
Sydney’s aloof expression remained unchanged as she spoke again. “Well, maybe you will meet her again, in which case that could be destiny,” she said, her tone making it difficult to tell whether she was serious or not.
I couldn’t help but feel a bit taken aback by her words. “I didn’t think of you as someone who believes in destiny,” I admitted.
Sydney’s gaze sharpened, and she asked, “Did we meet before?”
I shook my head, confusion furrowing my brow. “No, I don’t think so…”
“Then why do you speak as if we were long acquaintances?” She questioned.
“My bad…” I sighed.
Sydney was truly a bit weird, and I couldn’t help but wonder about the goth-style clothes she was wearing.
Sydney’s attention shifted away from our conversation as we approached what I assumed was her destination. The streetlights cast long shadows across the asphalt, illuminating a sleek red sedan parked beneath a flickering lamp post. Even in the dim light, I could tell it was well-maintained—the paint gleamed despite the chaos that had consumed the city over the past few days.
She moved fishing keys from her jacket pocket as she approached the driver’s side. The soft click of the lock disengaging seemed unusually loud in the oppressive silence of the empty street. Sydney slid into the driver’s seat with fluid grace, but instead of starting the engine, she turned to study me through the passenger window.
“Do you know how to drive a car?”
I paused with my hand on the passenger door handle. “Yeah, but I think you should drive it. You’d be better at it—it’s your car, after all.” The logic seemed sound to me. She knew the vehicle’s quirks, its handling, how it responded in different situations.
Without warning, Sydney’s keys came flying through the air toward me. I caught them reflexively, the metal still warm from her grip. “You drive.”
“Right…” I stood there for a moment, genuinely puzzled by her decision. There had to be a reason—Sydney didn’t strike me as someone who made arbitrary choices. But questioning her didn’t seem wise, so I walked around to the driver’s side as she settled into the passenger seat.
Before starting the engine, I took a moment to familiarize myself with the interior. The dashboard was clean and organized, with a GPS system that looked relatively new. The seats were leather—real leather, not the synthetic stuff—and the steering wheel had that solid, expensive feel that spoke of quality engineering. Everything about the car suggested Sydney came from money, or at least had access to it.
“So what’s the plan?” I asked, adjusting the mirrors and seat position to accommodate my height.
Sydney was already rummaging through the glove compartment. “You want to check on your mother first, right?” She said without looking up from her search.
The question caught me off guard with its directness, but I appreciated that she’d remembered. “Yeah, I would like to, but what about you?” I found myself genuinely curious about her situation. Everyone had people they cared about, didn’t they?
For a long moment, Sydney didn’t respond. Her hands stilled in their search, and I could see her profile in the reflection of the passenger window. When she finally found what she was looking for—an old-fashioned paper map, the kind people used to keep in their cars before GPS became standard—she pulled it out with a small, bitter smile.
“You don’t want to check on your family?” I asked gently, though something in her expression warned me I might be treading on sensitive ground.
“They’re probably dead. I won’t waste my time and risk my life.” The words came out flat, emotionless, as if she were discussing the weather rather than the potential death of her loved ones.
Her casual tone stunned me into silence. I’d expected sadness, maybe fear, even angry denial. But this cold pragmatism was something else entirely. It made me wonder what kind of relationship she’d had with her family. Had they been distant? Abusive? Or was this just Sydney’s way of coping with an impossible situation?
My own complicated feelings about my father surfaced unbidden. I understood, at least partially, what she meant. If someone had told me my father was dead, I’m not sure I would have felt much beyond a vague sense of relief. But my mother… that was different. She was everything to me.
“Alright, my mom first then,” I said, reaching over to turn on the car’s headlights. The beam cut through the darkness ahead of us, revealing an empty parking lot.
I turned the key in the ignition, and the engine purred to life with a quiet, well-tuned hum. At least we had reliable transportation—that was more than most people could say right now.
“Be careful. It’s night, and this isn’t a game. Don’t go bumping into the infected on purpose,” Sydney warned, though there was a hint of amusement in her voice that suggested she wasn’t entirely serious.
The thought had actually crossed my mind—not seriously, but the kind of dark humor that surfaces in crisis situations. What would happen if we just plowed through a group of them? Would the car hold up? How many could we take out before the engine gave out or we got overwhelmed?
Sydney must have read something in my expression because she shook her head with what looked suspiciously like exasperation. “You boys are all the same.”
“Come on,” I protested with a grin, putting the car in drive. “I’m not that reckless.”
As we pulled away from the curb, I focused on the route ahead. I knew these streets well—had walked and driven them countless times over the years. My apartment wasn’t in the most expensive part of New York, but it wasn’t in the worst area either. My mother had chosen it carefully when I’d started highschool, balancing safety, affordability, and proximity to campus. It was a decent place, with good security and reliable maintenance. At least, it had been before the world went to hell.
The streets were eerily quiet as we drove, our headlights occasionally catching glimpses of abandoned cars, broken windows, and debris scattered across the pavement. Every few blocks, we’d see evidence of the chaos that had swept through the city—overturned trash cans, dark stains on the asphalt that could have been blood, and the occasional shambling figure in the distance that made both of us tense up until we’d passed safely by.
“Now can you tell me where you want to go after this?” I asked, then felt a spike of panic as a horrible thought occurred to me. My eyes widened as the realization hit. “Wait… don’t tell me you’re planning to ditch me the second I get out of this car?”
The idea of losing access to reliable transportation—and if I was being honest, losing Sydney’s company—made my stomach clench with anxiety. Having a car would make all the difference if I needed to get my mother out of the city quickly. Hell, having a car might be the difference between life and death in this new world.
Sydney raised an eyebrow, a smirk playing at the corners of her mouth. “It’s my car. I do whatever I want with it, right?” She punctuated the question by swinging her legs up onto the dashboard, crossing them at the ankles with casualness.
“Right…” I muttered, deflated. I couldn’t argue with that logic, no matter how much I wanted to. She was already being incredibly generous letting me use her car to check on my mom. I had no right to expect anything more.
The silence stretched between us for a moment before Sydney spoke. “I’m joking. I won’t abandon you.” Then, with that sharp wit I was beginning to recognize as her trademark, she added, “I need a meat shield, just in case.”
Despite the morbid humor, I found myself smiling. There was something refreshing about her irreverent attitude in the face of catastrophe. “You’ve got quite the tongue on you,” I said, “but I don’t dislike it. Actually, I kind of admire how carefree you manage to be, considering we’re living through a zombie apocalypse and all.”
Sydney glanced up from the map she’d been studying, her fingers tracing what looked like potential escape routes out of the city. “What about you?” She countered. “You seem pretty calm yourself for someone whose world just ended.”
I considered that for a moment, watching a piece of newspaper blow across the empty street in front of us. “Well, I’m not completely alone like this. Liam’s been keeping things together back there. He’s…” I paused, trying to find the right words. “He’s got this natural leadership thing going on, you know? The scared people seem to feel safer when he’s calling the shots.”
It killed me to admit it, but it was true. Much as I despised the guy I couldn’t deny that he had a talent for projecting confidence when people needed it most.
Sydney let out a short, derisive laugh. “That guy? Please. He’s just as terrified as everyone else, but his ego won’t let him show it. The only reason he’s acting so bold is because he’s got a bunch of idiots willing to follow his every command. Take away his audience, and I guarantee you’ll see him crumble.”
Her assessment was brutally accurate, and I found myself nodding despite my earlier defense of Liam. Sydney had an unsettling ability to see through people’s facades.
“Weren’t you with his group?” I asked.
“For a few hours, max. I was already in that gymnasium when they showed up.” She folded the map. “I don’t take orders from anyone, especially not from some wannabe alpha male who thinks volume equals authority.”
That sounded exactly like something she would say. Independence seemed to be coded into her DNA.
The drive to my building took about fifteen minutes, winding through streets that should have been bustling with late-night activity. Instead, we passed abandoned cars, darkened storefronts, and the occasional shambling figure that made us both tense until we’d safely passed. When my apartment complex finally came into view, my heart sank. Several infected were wandering aimlessly around the main entrance, their movements jerky and unnatural in the streetlight.
“Underground parking,” I muttered, remembering the key card in my pocket. “I can get us in through the garage.”
The entrance to the private parking garage was mercifully clear. I swiped my card, and the metal gate rolled up with a mechanical groan that seemed deafeningly loud in the quiet night. As we descended into the underground space, what I saw made my blood run cold.
The parking garage, which should have been packed with residents’ cars on a weeknight, was nearly empty. Maybe a dozen vehicles scattered across spaces that normally held over a hundred. The implications were clear—people had either fled the city in panic, or they’d never made it back to their cars at all.
I found a spot near the elevator and killed the engine, the sudden silence feeling oppressive after the constant hum of the road. My hands were already shaking as I checked my surroundings through the windows. The fluorescent lights were still functioning, casting harsh shadows between the concrete pillars, but that somehow made it worse. Every shadow could be hiding something.
“I’ll be back,” I said.
Sydney had settled back into her seat, but I could see her eyes constantly scanning our surroundings. “Be quick,” she replied, and there was an edge to her voice that told me she was just as on edge as I was.
I nodded and stepped out of the car, immediately reaching for the box cutter I’d grabbed from the school’s art supply closet. It wasn’t much of a weapon—the blade was maybe two inches long—but it was sharp and it was all I had. My hand trembled slightly as I gripped it.
The parking garage was tomb-quiet except for the distant hum of ventilation systems and the occasional drip of water from somewhere in the shadows. Every footstep I took on the concrete seemed to echo endlessly, and I found myself walking on the balls of my feet, trying to minimize the noise.
The elevator was located near the back corner of the garage, and I had to pass several empty parking spaces to reach it. Each one felt like a potential hiding spot for something hungry and violent. By the time I reached the elevator bank, my shirt was sticking to my back with nervous sweat.
I pressed the call button and immediately flattened myself against the wall beside the doors, box cutter raised and ready. The mechanical whir of the elevator descending seemed to take forever, each floor marked by a soft ding that made me flinch.
When the doors finally slid open, I held my breath and peered around the edge of the doorframe.
The elevator car was empty of people, but it definitely wasn’t empty of evidence. The walls were painted with blood—not splattered, but smeared, as if someone had been dragged along them. Handprints streaked down the mirrors on the back wall, some small enough to belong to a child. The floor was sticky with dark stains that reflected the overhead light like oil.
My stomach lurched, but I forced myself to step inside. Whatever had happened here was over, and I needed to get to the third floor. I jabbed the button with my elbow, not wanting to touch it with my bare hand, and watched the numbers light up as we ascended.
“Come on, come on,” I muttered under my breath, tapping my foot nervously against the floor. The elevator seemed to be moving in slow motion, each floor taking an eternity. The blood-streaked walls seemed to close in around me, and I could smell something metallic and wrong in the recycled air.
Second floor. The elevator shuddered slightly, and for a heart-stopping moment I thought it might break down, trapping me in this metal tomb. But then it continued upward, and finally—finally—the doors opened onto the familiar hallway of the third floor.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 298: Rebecca Wants it...
- Chapter 297: Back to the Whitesun with Another Hostage
- Chapter 296: Callighan’s and Gaspar’s Disagreement
- Chapter 295: Meeting Callighan
- Chapter 294: Zakthar
- Chapter 293: Rebecca’s Blundering
- Chapter 292: Christopher’s Watch
- Chapter 291: Margaret, Martin and Clara meeting Kunta
- Chapter 290: Ryan Vs Penny
- Chapter 289: Symbiote Threat
- Chapter 288: New Glasses for Daisy
- Chapter 287: Love Moment with Cindy
- Chapter 286: With Cindy in the Optical Center [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 285: With Cindy in the Optical Center [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 284: On Way to the Optical Center
- Chapter 283: Keith’s Plan
- Chapter 282: Keith
- Chapter 281: Mei’s Dream
- Chapter 280: Doctor Shawn’s Crush
- Chapter 279: Half Costa Rican
- Chapter 278: Alliance Talk with Marlon [3]
- Chapter 277: Alliance Talk with Marlon [2]
- Chapter 276: Alliance Talk with Marlon [1]
- Chapter 275: The Past of Marlon and Callighan
- Chapter 274: Marlon Has a Daughter Complex
- Chapter 273: Fighting Rico
- Chapter 272: Alliance Offer to Marlon
- Chapter 271: Back to the Boardwalk [3]
- Chapter 270: Back to the Boardwalk [2]
- Chapter 269: Back to the Boardwalk [1]
- Chapter 268: Getting Rid of the Jacket
- Chapter 267: Anxious Ryan
- Chapter 266: Talking to Lucy
- Chapter 265: Bringing Mark in
- Chapter 264: Discussion With Mark
- Chapter 263: Sydney’s Instincts
- Chapter 262: Talk with the White Lady
- Chapter 261: Ivy’s Grip
- Chapter 260: Doing Rachel in the Whitesun Hotel [2] [R-18 Contents]
- Chapter 259: Doing Rachel in the Whitesun Hotel [1] [R-18 Contents]
- Chapter 258: An Alliance With Kunta [4]
- Chapter 257: An Alliance With Kunta [3]
- Chapter 256: An Alliance With Kunta [2]
- Chapter 255: An Alliance With Kunta [1]
- Chapter 254: Whitesun Hotel as New Home
- Chapter 253: Lucy The Hostage
- Chapter 252: The Golden Nugget Hotel [2]
- Chapter 251: The Golden Nugget Hotel [1]
- Chapter 250: Atlantic City State Marina [2]
- Chapter 249: Atlantic City State Marina [1]
- Chapter 248: Emily’s Fall
- Chapter 247: Callighan [2]
- Chapter 246: Callighan [1]
- Chapter 245: Mei Kidnapped [2]
- Chapter 244: Mei Kidnapped [1]
- Chapter 243: End of The Clearing Day
- Chapter 242: You Cannot Save Everyone
- Chapter 241: Summer Time [8]
- Chapter 240: Summer Time [7]
- Chapter 239: Summer Time [6]
- Chapter 238: Summer Time [5]
- Chapter 237: Summer Time [4]
- Chapter 236: Summer Time [3]
- Chapter 235: Summer Time [2]
- Chapter 234: Summer Time [1]
- Chapter 233: Clearing The Whitesun Hotel
- Chapter 232: Kunta [2]
- Chapter 231: Kunta [1]
- Chapter 230: A Starakian in the Whitesun Hotel
- Chapter 229: New Encounter at the Whitesun Hotel...
- Chapter 228: Claiming Atlantic City [6]
- Chapter 227: Claiming Atlantic City [5]
- Chapter 226: Gaspar [2]
- Chapter 225: Gaspar [1]
- Chapter 224: Rebecca’s Confusing Thoughts
- Chapter 223: Claiming Atlantic City [4]
- Chapter 222: Claiming Atlantic City [3]
- Chapter 221: Claiming Atlantic City [2]
- Chapter 220: Claiming Atlantic City [1]
- Chapter 219: On the Final Way to Atlantic City
- Chapter 218: Last Speech Before Atlantic City
- Chapter 217: Waking With Sydney in the Camping Van
- Chapter 216: Night Store Time with Sydney [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 215: Night Store Time with Sydney [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 214: Questions and Hesitation
- Chapter 213: Making The Decision
- Chapter 212: Daisy’s Situation
- Chapter 211: Telling About Emily
- Chapter 210: Back to Galloway
- Chapter 209: Discussion in the Camping Van
- Chapter 208: Back to Boardwalk with Maribel
- Chapter 207: Discussion With Maribel [2]
- Chapter 206: Discussion With Maribel [1]
- Chapter 205: Maribel’s Suspicions
- Chapter 204: Emily?
- Chapter 203: Familiar Shadow...
- Chapter 202: Fighting The Hybrid Infected of Atlantic City [2]
- Chapter 201: Fighting The Hybrid Infected of Atlantic City [1]
- Chapter 200: Unknown Threat
- Chapter 199: A Warm Meal with Carmen and Shannon [3]
- Chapter 198: A Warm Meal with Carmen and Shannon [2]
- Chapter 197: A Warm Meal with Carmen and Shannon [1]
- Chapter 196: Carmen and an Invitation
- Chapter 195: Meeting Marlon Lane
- Chapter 194: Boardwalk At Day
- Chapter 193: Visions of Wars
- Chapter 192: Boardwalk Night
- Chapter 191: Doctor Shawn
- Chapter 190: Talk with Molly
- Chapter 189: Finding a Solution
- Chapter 188: Tensions in the Memorial Building
- Chapter 187: Discussion With Maribel and Shannon
- Chapter 186: Maribel
- Chapter 185: Shannon
- Chapter 184: Scouting Atlantic City [7]
- Chapter 183: Scouting Atlantic City [6]
- Chapter 182: Scouting Atlantic City [5]
- Chapter 181: Scouting Atlantic City [4]
- Chapter 180: Scouting Atlantic City [3]
- Chapter 179: Scouting Atlantic City [2]
- Chapter 178: Scouting Atlantic City [1]
- Chapter 177: Atlantic City Scouting Group [2]
- Chapter 176: Atlantic City Scouting Group [1]
- Chapter 175: Margaret’s Doubt
- Chapter 174: Galloway Time With Cindy [5]
- Chapter 173: Galloway Time With Cindy [4] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 172: Galloway Time With Cindy [3] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 171: Galloway Time With Cindy [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 170: Galloway Time With Cindy [1]
- Chapter 169: Galloway [6]
- Chapter 168: Galloway [5]
- Chapter 167: Galloway [4]
- Chapter 166: Galloway [3]
- Chapter 165: Galloway [2]
- Chapter 164: Galloway [1]
- Chapter 163: Vladislav Petrov
- Chapter 162: Farewell Jackson Township [3]
- Chapter 161: Farewell Jackson Township [2]
- Chapter 160: Farewell Jackson Township [1]
- Chapter 159: End of the Screamer Incident!
- Chapter 158: The Scream [23]
- Chapter 157: The Scream [22]
- Chapter 156: The Scream [21]
- Chapter 155: The Scream [20]
- Chapter 154: The Scream [19]
- Chapter 153: The Scream [18]
- Chapter 152: The Scream [17]
- Chapter 151: The Scream [16]
- Chapter 150: The Scream [15]
- Chapter 149: The Scream [14]
- Chapter 148: The Scream [13]
- Chapter 147: The Scream [12]
- Chapter 146: The Scream [11]
- Chapter 145: The Scream [10]
- Chapter 144: The Scream [9]
- Chapter 143: The Scream [8]
- Chapter 142: The Scream [7]
- Chapter 141: The Scream [6]
- Chapter 140: The Scream [5]
- Chapter 139: The Scream [4]
- Chapter 138: The Scream [3]
- Chapter 137: The Scream [2]
- Chapter 136: The Scream [1]
- Chapter 135: The Call of the Screamer
- Chapter 134: Jasmine’s Request
- Chapter 133: Promise To Elena
- Chapter 132: In The Storage Room With Elena [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 131: Elena’s and Alisha’s Father
- Chapter 130: Reunion Between Christopher and Cindy
- Chapter 129: Reading Time with Liu Mei
- Chapter 128: Ivy Found
- Chapter 127: Searching Ivy
- Chapter 126: Solar Panel finally?!
- Chapter 125: Strategic Countermeasures Against The Screamer
- Chapter 124: Rachel’s Confession and Jason Called
- Chapter 123: Stabilizing Rachel? [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 122: Stabilizing Rachel? [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 121: Unspoken Truths
- Chapter 120: The Screamer [5]
- Chapter 119: The Screamer [4]
- Chapter 118: The Screamer [3]
- Chapter 117: The Screamer [2]
- Chapter 116: The Screamer [1]
- Chapter 115: Mending With Christopher
- Chapter 114: Complicated Truths
- Chapter 113: Are you a Host, Wanda?
- Chapter 112: What Solutions Against the Screamer?
- Chapter 111: To The Municipal Office!
- Chapter 110: Sydney’s Tease and Cindy’s Wearing it!
- Chapter 109: Staring-Admiring Rachel’s Stretchings
- Chapter 108: Stabilizing Cinderella [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 107: Stabilizing Cinderella [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 106: Aftermath of the Electrical Expedition
- Chapter 105: The Electrical Expedition [4]
- Chapter 104: The Electrical Expedition [3]
- Chapter 103: The Electrical Expedition [2]
- Chapter 102: The Electrical Expedition [1]
- Chapter 101: Morning Confessions and Unexpected Companions
- Chapter 100: Evening Rituals
- Chapter 99: With Sydney in an Empty Field [2] [R–18 Contents!]
- Chapter 98: With Sydney in an Empty Field [1] [R–18 Contents!]
- Chapter 97: Back to Home
- Chapter 96: Echoes in Empty Rooms
- Chapter 95: Spikes in the Dawn
- Chapter 94: Cindy’s Confession?
- Chapter 93: Whispers in the Heat
- Chapter 92: Fractured Foundations
- Chapter 91: Bitter Aftermath
- Chapter 90: The Weight of Necessity [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 89: The Weight of Necessity [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 88: In the Cold Silence
- Chapter 87: The Unbearable Choice
- Chapter 86: Frost Walker [3]
- Chapter 85: Frost Walker [2]
- Chapter 84: Frost Walker [1]
- Chapter 83: The Morning of Fire and Farewells
- Chapter 82: Flamethrower [3]
- Chapter 81: Flamethrower [2]
- Chapter 80: Flamethrower [1]
- Chapter 79: Revelations and Decisions
- Chapter 78: Revealing To The Group
- Chapter 77: Alien Device Discovered!
- Chapter 76: Christopher’s Discovery!
- Chapter 75: Treated By Miss Ivy
- Chapter 74: Alisha’s Decision
- Chapter 73: Ryan Takes Steroids?
- Chapter 72: Explaining to Alisha
- Chapter 71: Stabilizing Elena [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 70: Stabilizing Elena [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 69: The Drive Home
- Chapter 68: Cleanup and Sydney...
- Chapter 67: Ten Days Later
- Chapter 66: Dawn’s Uncertain Light
- Chapter 65: After the Pharmacy Night
- Chapter 64: Pharmacy Night With Rachel [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 63: Pharmacy Night With Rachel [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 62: Taking Down The Fire Spitter!
- Chapter 61: Night Attack On The Municipality Office!
- Chapter 60: Small Meal With Rachel
- Chapter 59: Rachel’s Concern [2]
- Chapter 58: Rachel’s Concern [1]
- Chapter 57: Jackson Township Group [3]
- Chapter 56: Jackson Township Group [2]
- Chapter 55: Jackson Township Group [1]
- Chapter 54: Infected Dog!
- Chapter 53: Center Town of Jackson Township
- Chapter 52: A Peaceful Waking
- Chapter 51: Night with Sydney
- Chapter 50: Eating Sydney [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 49: Eating Sydney [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 48: Settling In!
- Chapter 47: Telling Rachel
- Chapter 46: Who Is Abraham Lincoln?
- Chapter 45: Grocery Store Aftermath
- Chapter 44: Jackson Township
- Chapter 43: Leaving New York!
- Chapter 42: Leaving Lexington Charter [3]
- Chapter 41: Leaving Lexington Charter [2]
- Chapter 40: Leaving Lexington Charter [1]
- Chapter 39: Escape from the Library
- Chapter 38: Dullahan
- Chapter 37: Suspicion and Secrets
- Chapter 36: Short Waves Radio And Gun Obtained!
- Chapter 35: Second Power [2]
- Chapter 34: Second Power [1]
- Chapter 33: Curing Elena [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 32: Curing Elena [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 31: Elena Bitten
- Chapter 30: Suicide Mission
- Chapter 29: Suicide Squad
- Chapter 28: The Dangerous Plan
- Chapter 27: Lexington Charter: Library
- Chapter 26: Lexington Charter: Third Floor
- Chapter 25: Lexington Charter: Second Floor
- Chapter 24: The Russian Twins [2]
- Chapter 23: The Russian Twins [1]
- Chapter 22: Entering Lexington Charter!
- Chapter 21: Arrival at Lexington Academy
- Chapter 20: Mending With Rachel And Leaving Sydney’s House
- Chapter 19: Last Dinner At Sydney’s
- Chapter 18: Sydney Teasing Ryan
- Chapter 17: Lexington Charter
- Chapter 16: Leaving With The Sisters
- Chapter 15: Curing Rachel [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 14: Curing Rachel [1] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 13: White Threat
- Chapter 12: First Floor Neighbours
- Chapter 11: Motherless
- Chapter 10: Sydney
- Chapter 9: Parting With Emily
- Chapter 8: Finding Schoolmates!
- Chapter 7: Escaping The Infected School!
- Chapter 6: Power Revealed
- Chapter 5: The Awakening
- Chapter 4: Let’s Have Sex [4] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 3: Let’s Have Sex [3] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 2: Let’s Have Sex [2] [R-18 Contents!]
- Chapter 1: Let’s Have Sex [1]