Chapter 95: Spikes in the Dawn
The outskirts of Jackson Township stretched out like a forgotten battlefield, where the remnants of suburbia bled into wild slowly. I’d been slipping out here every morning for the past month, long before the first light cracked the horizon, leaving the house while the others were still wrapped in whatever fragile sleep they could snatch. The air was always crisp at this hour, carrying the faint scent of dew-soaked grass mixed with the metallic tang of rust from abandoned cars. The roads—once smooth arteries connecting quiet neighborhoods—were now fractured veins of cracked asphalt, overgrown with weeds that pushed through every fissure like nature’s slow revenge. Scattered houses dotted the landscape, their windows shattered or boarded up, roofs sagging under the weight of neglect. Some still had faded American flags hanging limp from porches.
This particular stretch, the eastern approach to the township, was my domain. I’d transformed it into a gauntlet of death, one painstaking spike at a time. It all started after we’d scouted the old radio station and glimpsed the horror waiting inside—the Screamer. That thing wasn’t just another alien weapon; it was a living nightmare, capable of unleashing wails that could shatter eardrums and summon hordes of infected from miles around. One full-throated scream from it, and Jackson Township would be overrun. Our house, with its makeshift fortifications and the group I wanted to protect, would be the first to fall. The Municipal Office community—our best allies—wouldn’t stand a chance either. We couldn’t risk going after it until the defenses were ironclad. So, every dawn, while Rachel and the others slept, I came out here to build them. It was my penance, my purpose, the only way I could move forward.
The main road was my crowning achievement, a deadly maze I’d carved into the concrete over countless mornings. I’d started with basic pitfalls—shallow trenches filled with sharpened rebar scavenged from construction sites—but that wasn’t enough. Using pickaxes I’d looted from abandoned hardware stores and crowbars reinforced with scrap metal, I’d dug deep into the roadbed, breaking through layers of asphalt and gravel that fought back like they knew what I was doing.
The spikes were a brutal assortment: steel rods I’d hammered to razor points in Mark’s improvised forge at the Municipal Office, wooden stakes I’d carved from fallen oaks and fire-hardened until they could punch through bone. I drove them into the ground at calculated angles—low ones to snag feet and ankles, mid-height to impale torsos, tall ones wrapped in coils of razor wire I’d stripped from old chain-link fences. The spacing was precise: just wide enough for a skilled driver to zigzag through in a car if they knew the pattern, but a deathtrap for anything without a brain. Infected didn’t think; they shambled straight ahead, drawn by some primal instinct toward noise or scent or the promise of flesh. They’d charge in, get snagged on a wire, impaled on a spike, and either bleed out in agony or thrash until I came to end it.
I’d extended the traps to every major entry point around the township—north, south, west, and east. The northern road, winding through what used to be farmland, now had pits lined with upward-pointing stakes, camouflaged with debris to catch the unwary. The southern approach, flanked by derelict strip malls, featured tripwires connected to dangling blades that would swing down like pendulums. It was exhausting work, my mornings filled with the grind of digging, hammering, and testing. My hands were callused maps of scars now, but the Dullahan Virus made it bearable—hell, it made me stronger. The virus hummed in my veins, amplifying my endurance, letting me work for hours without fatigue. But it wasn’t just physical; it sharpened my senses, turned every movement into something efficient.
This morning, like all the others, I walked the eastern road slowly, my boots crunching on loose gravel. The sun was just peeking over the distant tree line, casting long shadows that made the spikes look like jagged teeth rising from the earth. I checked my work methodically—testing a wire here, straightening a bent rod there. One spike had warped from a larger infected’s impact yesterday; I hammered it back into shape with a few precise strikes, the virus lending my arms unnatural power. No breaches. No weak points. Satisfied, I headed to my spot: a faded green velvet armchair I’d dragged from a nearby abandoned house weeks ago. It was torn in places, stuffing poking out like white foam, but it was comfortable enough. I positioned it right behind the first line of spikes, giving me a front-row view of the road while keeping me safely out of reach. Settling in, I propped my feet on a rusted crate and waited.
Waiting was part of the ritual now. It gave me space to think, to sift through the chaos in my head. But thinking wasn’t always kind. It stirred up memories I’d rather bury—the responsibilities, the fractures in our group, the virus that had turned me into something more than human. I wasn’t panicked about it; panic was a luxury I couldn’t afford anymore. It was just… there, a constant undercurrent, like the low hum of the virus itself. Calm wasn’t something I forced; it was what survived after everything else burned away.
The first infected appeared about twenty minutes later, as the sun fully crested and bathed the road in warm light. It was a lone wanderer, what might have been a farmer once, clad in shredded overalls caked with dirt and old blood. No hesitation in its step—just that relentless shuffle forward, milky eyes fixed on nothing. I watched impassively as it hit the outer spikes. The low steel point caught its shin, tearing through decayed flesh with a wet rip. It stumbled, pitching into a cluster of mid-height stakes. One impaled its thigh, another snagged its arm on razor wire, slicing deep gashes that oozed black ichor. It didn’t scream—most didn’t anymore, their vocal cords rotted to uselessness—but it flailed, managing to drive its free hand onto another spike. The thing was stuck good, thrashing uselessly as its own weight drove the points deeper.
It didn’t faze me. I’d seen hundreds like this over the month. The nonchalance wasn’t bravado; it was efficiency. Get emotional over every kill, and you’d break. I’d learned that early, back when we first arrived in Jackson Township after fleeing New York. The search results from my mind’s eye—those fragmented memories of our escape—played like an old film. The motorcycle’s hum as we left the city’s decay, the fresh air of the countryside, the sign for Jackson Township with “DEAD” spray-painted over the population. We’d scavenged that grocery store, fought infected, discovered powers awakening in Rachel after… after what I’d had to do to save her. Her superhuman strength hurling that infected woman across the store, the realization of the Dullahan Virus spreading. It all started there in Jackson Township, in those early days of survival.
More infected trickled in—a group of three, then two stragglers. They charged the traps like moths to flame, getting tangled in wires, skewered on points. One, a woman with half her jaw missing, weaved drunkenly through a gap at first, her decayed brain giving her just enough instinct to avoid the worst. But a low wire tripped her, sending her face-first into a bed of sharpened wood. The stakes punched through her chest and neck, and she twitched for a minute before going still. Blood pooled dark on the asphalt, the metallic scent cutting through the morning air.
I leaned back in the armchair, observing it all like a scientist watching an experiment. There was an eerie calm to it, sure, but from where I sat, it was just practical. The virus had changed me—made me numb to the gore in a way that let me function. It wasn’t cold detachment; it was survival mode, honed over a month of this routine. The traps worked because I’d refined them through trial and error. Early versions had flaws—gaps too wide, spikes too brittle. Infected would break through, forcing me into close quarters fights that wasted energy and risked unnecessary wounds. But now? It was a well-oiled machine. Cars could navigate the zigzag path slowly, but infected? They were fodder.
One of the newer ones—a burly brute, maybe a former trucker, with muscles still bulging under rotting skin—actually put up a fight. It barreled into a steel spike, impaling its leg with a crunch that echoed down the road. It roared—a guttural, wet sound—and wrenched free, tearing flesh in chunks but limping onward. Impressive, in a twisted way. It dodged two more clusters, weaving like it had some spark of intelligence left, but a high wire snagged its neck. It face-planted into a row of wooden stakes, one driving clean through its eye socket. The body jerked once, then went limp.
I didn’t react beyond a slight nod. Calm wasn’t eerie to me; it was necessary. The virus demanded it—pushed me to see patterns, efficiencies, without the fog of emotion. A dozen were stuck now, some still flailing, others bleeding out in slow agony. Time to clean house.
I stood up feeling the virus surge like a second pulse. My body had evolved over the month—stronger, faster, more resilient. The Dullahan Virus wasn’t just a curse; it was a tool I’d learned to wield. Control came easier now; I could channel its power without the draining backlash of those early days. Muscles rippled under my skin, enhanced beyond human limits, reflexes sharpened to a razor’s edge.
My favourite weapon leaned against the armchair: a metal spike the size of a sword, its shaft wrapped in black leather for a secure grip, the point honed to a needle’s sharpness. I’d forged it myself in Mark’s workshop, balancing it perfectly for one-handed strikes. Grabbing it, I approached the traps with measured steps. The first infected—a skinny one pinned by wires—lunged at me, jaws snapping. But I was faster; the virus amplified my speed, turning my thrust into a blur. The spike punched through its forehead, bone giving way with a crack, brain matter splattering as it went limp. Efficient. Clean.
Next, a pair tangled together, their decayed limbs intertwined. One swiped at me, but I sidestepped effortlessly, the virus heightening my awareness—every twitch, every groan telegraphed like a warning. I stabbed the first in the eye, twisted to free the blade, then drove it into the second’s temple. Blood sprayed, but I was already moving, untouched. The power wasn’t raw force anymore; it was precision. I could feel the virus guiding me, making each kill a dance of death.
The burly one that had escaped earlier was still half-alive, pinned but snarling. It lunged as I neared, but I was ready. Time seemed to slow—the virus’s gift—letting me pivot and bring the spike down in an arc that severed its head clean from its shoulders. The body slumped, headless, as the skull rolled away. No wasted energy, no close calls. I’d trained this out here, every morning, turning the traps into my personal arena. The virus had made me a weapon, body and mind honed for survival.
Twelve down, the road clear again. I wiped the spike on a rag from my pocket, the gore coming off in thick smears, then returned to the armchair. Stabbing the weapon into the soft earth beside it—the ground yielding easily—I settled back and reached into my jacket.
Cigarettes. I hadn’t been a smoker before all this—hell, I’d hated the smell growing up, watching my mom cough through packs during her worst days. But coping changes when the world does. The Dullahan Virus, the endless responsibility, the awkward relationships in the group—it all piled up like a weight on my chest. Mark had noticed first, during one of our supply runs to the Municipal Office. “Kid, you look like hell,” he’d grunted, offering me one from his pack. “This helps with the stress. No lectures—smoking kills, yeah, but so does being the host of that damn virus and everything you’re carrying.”
I appreciated that about Mark. No annoying sermons, no judgment. Just practical advice from a guy who’d seen his own share of apocalypse. He knew nothing about what I had—and he didn’t push. “You’re doing what needs doing,” he’d say, clapping my shoulder. “Don’t let it eat you alive.” He’d even slipped me a fresh pack last week, no questions asked.
One cigarette, once a day, only out here. No one at home knew, and I wanted it that way—especially Rachel. She’d worry, lecture me about health in a world where infected bites were the real killer. But this was my secret ritual, a moment of calm in the storm. I lit it with a scavenged Zippo, inhaling deeply. The smoke burned my lungs, bitter and acrid, but it eased the knot in my chest. Exhaling slowly, I watched the plume curl into the air, drifting over the spikes like a ghost.
A month… it felt like a lifetime. After the Frost Walker mission, everything splintered. Christopher’s departure hit hardest—he’d been a close friend since the beginning, back in New York, accepting my suicide quest to get that Short Waves Radio at Lexington Charter.
Christopher had been there since all and even after the revelation he stuck to my side among the firsts. But Cindy’s cure—the necessity of it, the intimacy—broke him. He’d packed and left for the Municipal Office, integrating there like he’d always belonged. I hadn’t spoken to him properly since; just tense nods during runs.
The guilt gnawed at me—had I destroyed the only true male friend I ever had?
Cindy had withdrawn into a shell, her laughter gone after what we’d done. Stabilizing her required more sessions—two over the weeks, each one mechanical and guilt-ridden. She was stronger now, the virus integrated, but emotionally she was clearly not feeling good. She wasn’t even able to look properly at me.
Christopher’s absence haunted her still clearly.
I couldn’t tell to turn the page, it would be quite bastardly from me. I should just let her the time she needs.
Elena and Alisha were still there but after the Screamer is defeated they will leave, at least that was what Alisha told me.
Rebecca’s resentment boiled over daily. She blamed me for the secrets, the dangers, the losses. “You’re tearing us apart,” she’d snapped one night, her eyes flashing. Rachel defended me, but it strained their bond. They shared a room so the sisterly could only have cooled down but the relation between me and Rebecca was only worsening.
Sydney… she’d been my anchor, her teasing a lifeline. That night in the basement—our first real connection, raw and intimate—had changed things. Waking up with her, the movie, the talks… it was a glimpse of normalcy. But even that carried weight; the virus meant complications, precautions, secrets.
The Screamer loomed over it all. We’d delayed the assault because of its power—two small screams in the past month had summoned groups we’d barely fended off. The first came a week after the Frost Walker: a wail echoing from the radio station, drawing dozens to the township edges. We’d fought them back, but it cost us supplies and sleep. The second, ten days ago, was worse—a herd that nearly breached the Municipal Office. Mark and his people held, unaware it was tied to me, to the alien device we were piecing together. How could I tell them? “Hey, I’m a walking beacon for horrors”? They’d think I was insane.
The virus had grown in me too—control absolute now. Wind blades sliced with pinpoint accuracy, time freezes lasted their full duration without exhaustion. My body healed faster, moved with lethal grace. Out here, killing infected was almost meditative.
I flicked the cigarette away, watching it arc into the spikes and smolder out. Enough dwelling. There was work left.
Standing up, I grabbed the spike from the ground—its silk-wrapped handle familiar in my palm—and slung my backpack over one shoulder. A two-story house on the horizon had caught my eye earlier: partially collapsed roof, but intact enough for scavenging. Might yield canned goods, tools, or even more wire for traps.
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]