"A third screech echoed from somewhere deeper in the mall. Lower. Rougher. Like something even worse had arrived.
Klahan—the Asian man—picked up two broken pipes. He tossed one to Bridget. "We move. Now."
She caught it. The weight of the iron slightly weighed her down.
I turned to Paul. "Can you fight?"
He didn't answer with words. He tore his shirt, wrapping it around his fists like makeshift gloves. A boxer's instinct. He looked half-dead but still determined.
We didn't have a plan. No backup. No idea what these things even were.
This wasn't just survival anymore.
This was war.
And we were losing.
They screeched.
We braced.
And then, all hell broke loose."
—––—
In the blink of an eye they were on us.
Bridget and Katie were pushed back so they wouldn't get torn apart, but we all knew she'd have to fight too — there was no hiding from these things.
The first one came barreling forward, its arm swinging like a wrecking ball to fling Klahan out of the way. He dodged it, –he was as fast as lightning– and slammed the pipe into its waist. The thing shrieked, stumbling for just a heartbeat.
He was even able to land a hit? I felt hope flicker, only to be snuffed out when the creature reared back up, twice as furious.
I turned and the second one was right behind Paul. He was already half broken, chest heaving with every ragged breath. He tried to raise his fists but the monster lunged.
Out of habit, I reached for my holster. Empty.
"Shit!" I spat. I must've dropped it back at the entrance.
I scrambled my eyes across the ground for anything, anything I could use. Debris, broken glass, scattered trash, nothing good enough. So I ran forward, bat in hand, and with every bit of rage and panic pumping through my veins, I hurled it like a spear. It smacked the creature's shoulder — useless. But it gave Paul a second to dodge. He swung his wrapped fist, connecting with its jaw. The sickening crunch rattled through the air. The thing just hissed, unfazed.
Then, something caught my eye. Back near the railing, half-hidden beneath a shredded backpack, a sidearm.
I dove for it as Klahan yelped behind me. One of the creatures pinned him against the wall. I gripped the gun, flicked the safety — four bullets. That's it. Just four.
I lined up the sights, adrenaline burning every nerve raw. The thing's head twisted at me, eyes gleaming with that unholy light.
Bang.
Miss, the bullet tore through its shoulder. It shrieked but kept moving. Bang.
Missed again. Too high. My vision blurred with sweat.
It charged, claws slamming down on broken tiles, and I could see its teeth, rows of them, jagged, twitching in anticipation.
"GEORGE!" Bridget's voice snapped me back. I exhaled. Lined up again.
And with intense concentration i fire again.
Bang.
The bullet punched straight through its eye socket. The thing staggered, arms flailing. One of its claws clipped the ceiling as it shrieked, the sound cutting into my skull like glass. I didn't wait for it to die. I spun, found the other one barreling toward Bridget and Klahan. Klahan was on the ground now, back raked with claw marks and blood soaked through his shirt.
Bang.
The last bullet tore through the creature's ear, or what was left of it. It wasn't a clean kill, but it was enough. Bridget seized the opening. She grabbed a jagged metal shard, darted in fearless and drove it up under its chin. She twisted hard, face tight with rage and survival instinct. The thing convulsed, stumbled backward. Klahan kicked out from the ground, sending it crashing through a busted railing. It fell with a wet crack to the floor below.
I didn't even realize I was shaking until I felt the empty gun rattling in my hand.
It took everything we had to bring them down. And they weren't even dead, just injured.
For a few heartbeats, all I could hear was our labored breaths, Bridget's ragged gasps as she wiped gore from her eyes, Klahan hissing as he pulled himself up, Paul leaning against a pillar, clutching his ribs like they'd crack open any second.
"George," Bridget rasped, Pointing towards the one we had just sent down, and just as i had suspected it wasnt dead.
It drew out the scrap metal Bridget had lunged into it and shrieked.
She grabed Katie, who peeked out from behind a fallen sign and threw her on her back. "We have to move. Now. Because those things are obviously not dead, and from what we just pulled off every single creature in this building has been alerted."
She was right. The smoke, the growls, the shifting shadows, we'd just called every other monster in this hellhole straight to us.
I limped over to Klahan. He winced as I helped him stand. Deep scratches ran across his lower back, blood trickling through his fingers as he tried to press it shut.
"You're gonna be fine," I lied. His eyes met mine. He knew. But he nodded anyway.
We scrambled through the shattered corridor, half-carrying Paul, Bridget holding Katie on her back. She looked like a mother and a warrior all at once — hair matted with sweat, eyes blazing with raw fear and iron resolve.
At the far end of the second floor, I spotted an old service sign — Atrium Level — Storage / Staff Quarters. It looked sturdy enough, for now.
We shoved through the door and into the storage section. Dusty crates, broken furniture, but no monsters. Not yet. We took a moment to catch our breath, each of us sinking to the ground or leaning against the concrete walls.
That's when we heard voices.
At first, I thought it was the echo of the creatures. But no — actual human voices, low, frantic, coming from behind a stack of pallets.
Bridget stepped forward, shifting Katie to her hip. "Hello? Anyone there?"
Three figures emerged — two women, one young guy, all clutching makeshift weapons: a broom handle, a rusted crowbar, a broken hockey stick. Their eyes widened when they saw us. Relief and suspicion fought for space on their faces.
"More survivors," the older woman breathed. "Thank God."
I wanted to say the same, but my throat was raw, lungs burning like they'd been scraped with razors. "We can't stay here," I managed. "These things… they're coming right for us."
The younger guy flinched. "What the hell are they?"
Bridget's eyes flicked around the room, trying to avoid all the other eyes. Careful. Calculating. She spoke slow, almost too calm. "We don't know exactly," she said. "But they're mutating. Fast. Did you see what they did to the ceilings? The walls? They're getting stronger — adapting. Every time we encounter them, they change."
I caught her eyes. Something unspoken passed between us, she knew more than she let on. But now wasn't the time to push.
We rallied the new group, moving through the staff storage section into an old retail corridor. Half-collapsed, wires dangling like nooses, but it gave us a path. Every noise in the distance, the skitter of claws, the shrieks echoing off steel beams — it made my skin crawl.
Paul leaned heavy on my shoulder, his breath ragged. Klahan staggered behind us, one hand pressed tight to his wound. The kid with the hockey stick watched our backs.
At every junction, we searched for an exit. Blocked. Caved in. Burnt to ash. The mall was rotting from the inside out, the air thick with chemical fumes and the coppery sting of blood.
Bridget caught my limp. She glanced at my leg, a chunk of my uniform was torn open, skin already bruising purple. She didn't say anything, just shifted Katie higher on her hip.
"it's just a scratch." I say.
"We'll find a way out," she murmured. But her eyes flicked to the shadows — like she didn't believe it.
When we finally stumbled onto a section of the mall that still looked untouched, clean, whole, like nothing had even happened. I felt the first flicker of real hope. A sign above read RESTAURANT ROW. A few shuttered diners, an Italian joint with the lights still flickering.
We pushed inside.
The smell of grease and burnt oven bread hit me like a punch. But there was food — dry, cold, but edible. We raided the pantries, forcing down mouthfuls of cold pasta and half-smashed crackers. Nobody talked much. Every sound outside reminded us that we were only borrowing time.
Then — a crackle.
I froze. Lifted my radio. For hours it had been nothing but static. Now, a voice, garbled, distant.
"—copy— anyone— inside — read—?"
My pulse spiked. I pressed the button so hard it nearly broke. "This is Officer George Alvarez! Survivors inside! Bayside Mall! Do you copy?!"
Silence, then more static. Bridget's eyes locked on mine. Hope, bright and sharp, flickered across every face in that ruined diner.
"—copy… repeat… evacuation compromised—"
"Repeat that!" I shouted. "We're trapped in here! We need rescue — repeat, we need—"
The voice sharpened, then broke apart. Screaming. Gunfire. Someone barking orders. Then words, crystal clear, cutting through every last ounce of hope.
"No rescue mission. Repeat — no rescue mission. Containment protocol initiated. You're on your own."
The radio went dead.
No one moved. No one spoke.
Katie whimpered, burying her face in Bridget's neck. Klahan dropped his makeshift spear with a dull clatter. Paul just leaned back, eyes closing like he was too tired to even curse.
Bridget looked at me. I could see it in her eyes — the secret she was still hiding, buried deep under layers of guilt and cold logic. She opened her mouth, then shut it.
Outside, the growls started again. Louder. Closer.
And in that pitch-black silence, we all realized, we were the last line between each other and those things. There would be no help.
I gripped the dead radio so hard my knuckles burned.
"Then we make our own way out," I whispered.
No one answered.
But in the quiet, we all knew — there was no other choice.