The orange and violet hues of the evening sun spilled across the ruined skyline of Atlanta, casting long, war-torn shadows between the skyscrapers and over the husks of forgotten cars. The air was cooler up here, the wind gentler, brushing past cracked concrete and rusted AC units like a whisper. From his perch atop a five-story office building, Aiden sat with one leg bent and the other hanging loosely over the ledge, his posture calm but alert—an apex predator at rest.
The streets below pulsed with a grotesque kind of life. A vast horde of walkers—at least 300 strong—moved like a slow, mindless tide through the avenues. Their groans blended into a droning symphony of decay, boots and broken limbs dragging along asphalt littered with debris, crushed metal, and forgotten belongings. From his vantage point, Aiden could see it all: the shambling figures weaving between abandoned buses, piling up at intersections, clustering at corners like insects around old light.
He said nothing. Did nothing. Just observed.
A faded piece of lined paper lay across his knee, secured at the corners with two scavenged binder clips to keep it from flapping in the breeze. It was worn and crumpled, but it served its purpose. With a scavenged mechanical pencil and slow, deliberate movements, Aiden began drawing—carefully, methodically—sketching the blocks below in rough geometry, adding building outlines, broken intersections, parking garages, alleyways, and overpasses.
He marked the major roads and labeled them. He circled known trap points—collapsed roads, bus barricades, burned-out gas stations—and lightly shaded areas where the horde density seemed highest. Every so often, he glanced up from his work and counted.
One. Two. Three groups splintering off from the main mass.
He adjusted the map again, marking down walker movement patterns he'd been tracking for the last twenty minutes. It wasn't a perfect science—these creatures didn't think, didn't plan—but their behavior still followed rules. Sound drew them like a magnet. Light. Motion. Fire. Aiden had seen it again and again. But more interesting were the patterns forming when there wasn't a lure: how they instinctively clumped in open spaces, drifted toward the shade during the brightest hours, or jammed up at choke points like doorways and alleys.
All of it mattered. Because the more he understood the swarm, the more he could avoid it—or weaponize it.
He sat in silence for a long while after finishing the rough sketch, his pencil idly tapping against his boot. The sound of moaning below was strangely constant—an ambient roar of death that had become part of the world now. Distant fires flickered to life across the skyline, plumes of smoke curling into the darkening sky like black threads.
Aiden folded the paper neatly, placing it into a waterproof sleeve and then tucking it into his vest's inner pocket. He'd copy it into a more permanent notebook later—maybe even transfer it into the system journal if the feature let him store visuals eventually.
He leaned back, resting against the old HVAC vent behind him, and let his eyes scan the horizon.
The city had changed. Once alive, bright, chaotic in the way only cities could be. Now, it was quiet. Heavy. Haunted. But he was changing with it. Each day he survived, each piece of knowledge he added to his mental library, every fight, every choice—he was becoming something sharper. Something more prepared.
He knew the mall wouldn't be a forever base. It was a staging point. A stepping stone.
This rooftop? Just a temporary observation post.
Aiden's eyes narrowed behind the shadows of his balaclava as the rhythmic thump of rotor blades rolled in from the distance—low, heavy, and unmistakable. The sound sliced through the evening hush like a war drum, growing louder with each passing second. Instinctively, he ducked lower behind the rooftop's ledge, drawing his binoculars from a pouch at his side and raising them to his eyes with swift precision.
A military helicopter, dark green and weathered by smoke and dust, roared overhead from the southwest. Its spotlight flickered on and off as it passed between buildings, casting erratic, sweeping cones of light onto the city blocks below. Walkers everywhere reacted like marionettes tugged by an invisible string—moaning louder, shifting direction, drawn by the noise and flashing light.
Aiden tracked its movement carefully, noting the direction it was heading—north by northeast—before it veered off into the distance, disappearing behind a wall of smoke and steel.
Then, something even more surreal pulled his gaze downward.
The binoculars remained steady in his hands, but his heartbeat ticked upward as he focused on the eastern boulevard—a temporary gap between the walker horde and one of the cleaner, vehicle-free streets. A horse, galloping fast, hooves thundering against the cracked pavement. And riding it, steady as a seasoned lawman, was a man in a sheriff's uniform, a revolver holstered at his side, tan shirt stained with sweat and dust.
Aiden froze.
"No way..."
He knew that silhouette. The iconic hat, the way the man sat in the saddle, that grim-yet-hopeful determination carved into his expression. Even from a distance, through a dusty lens and the dying light of evening, there was no mistaking him.
Rick Grimes.
The Rick Grimes.
The same man Aiden had read about, watched on screens, studied in the lore of a world long since fictional—until now. Somehow, impossibly, he was here. A ghost of a legend galloping straight into a nightmare, just as the horde thickened.
Aiden's breath caught as he watched Rick rein the horse hard to the right, skidding at the intersection and disappearing into the very heart of the walker horde now being drawn toward the sound of the helicopter. It was madness. It was brave. It was suicide.
It was exactly what Rick Grimes would do.
Dozens of walkers, now disoriented by the helicopter, began to stagger after the noise, while others turned toward the commotion Rick's horse had caused. The man moved like he was retracing old steps, headed toward a hospital tower half-swallowed in overgrowth and shadow.
Aiden pulled his binoculars away, his mind racing.
"Is this… some kind of echo? A time fracture? A second reality blending into mine?" he muttered under his breath.
Or… was he simply not alone in this version of the apocalypse?
Suddenly, the game changed. Aiden wasn't just surviving in a dead city anymore. There were legends walking these streets—real ones. Which meant the rules of the world might be deeper than he thought.
Clutching the binoculars, Aiden slowly backed away from the edge of the rooftop, crouching behind a vent as the wind carried the last whispers of the chopper's blades into the distance.
Rick Grimes had just ridden into Atlanta.
And Aiden?
He was watching history unfold…Or maybe destiny.
Aiden remained crouched on the rooftop, the chill of the wind brushing against his exposed arms just below the sleeves of his tactical jacket, but he didn't feel it. His breath had slowed to a near-stop, his eyes fixed on the scene unraveling below with a strange sense of déjà vu… yet unreality.
He leaned forward, binoculars clutched tighter as he watched Rick turn the corner and ride directly into the storm. The horde had fully shifted now, drawn from the surrounding blocks like iron filings to a magnet. At least two hundred walkers had reoriented, all stumbling, snarling, surging toward the new source of sound and movement. A sick tide of decay converging on one man.
And still, Rick pressed on.
Even from a distance, Aiden could see the tension—how Rick's posture stiffened when he realized too late that the way forward was sealed with rotting bodies. The horse reared, panicked, whinnying in terror. Aiden's throat clenched. He knew exactly what was coming next.
He had watched this moment a hundred times from a screen in another world.
This was the moment.
The moment the apocalypse finally greeted Rick Grimes with fangs.
The walkers collapsed inward like wolves descending on prey, swarming the horse. Aiden's fists clenched. The creature went down with a piercing scream, lost beneath clawed fingers and gnashing teeth. Blood splattered the pavement in wide arcs. The sound—the horrifying mixture of equine agony and the growls of the dead—rippled through the streets like thunder.
Rick, stunned, fell hard. Rolled. Scrambled back.
But he didn't freeze. He ran.
Just like Aiden remembered. Right past the tangled remains of the horse, around the turned-over Humvee, and toward the abandoned military tank sitting lifeless at the end of the block like some long-forgotten beast. The hatch was still open. Aiden could almost hear the tension in Rick's breath as he climbed inside, yanking the heavy metal lid shut just as the horde crashed against the tank like a living flood.
Inside, there would be darkness. Isolation. And the chilling realization that the world was no longer the same.
Aiden sat back against the rooftop vent and slowly removed his binoculars. For a long moment, he just stared out across the skyline, letting the moment settle over him.
But his mind was racing.
This Rick—he looked too healthy. Not pale and weakened from weeks in a coma. His movements were too steady, too focused. The way he fought, ran, acted—it wasn't the Rick who had just woken up in a hospital bed.
This Rick wasn't broken. Not yet.
"Alternate timeline," Aiden murmured to himself. "Or maybe... a fractured reality? A system-created replication?"
He didn't know yet. But it felt important.
He could have left it alone. Watched Rick vanish into the maze of time and storytelling. But something stirred in Aiden's chest—a feeling he hadn't fully acknowledged since the fall began.
Hope.
Because if Rick Grimes was real… if even part of that story was walking this world…Then maybe Aiden wasn't just surviving.
Maybe he was being called to something bigger.
He looked back down at the swarm now pressing against the tank, their moans echoing through the empty city like a funeral chant.
Rick was alive in there.
And Aiden had a choice to make. Watch history repeat…Or change it.
Aiden's jaw clenched as he slid the binoculars back into his vest pocket, the city's evening wind brushing against him like a whisper from the past. The sounds of the horde below were growing more erratic, more agitated—Rick's escape into the tank had clearly stirred the nest. But Aiden didn't move. He sat still, back pressed against the warm metal of the rooftop vent, his breath steady as stone.
He'd seen enough.
Yes, this was the moment where most stories would try to pull him in. The "main plotline," if this world even worked that way. The draw of camaraderie, the nostalgic temptation to join familiar faces, to "help the hero" and become part of something… bigger.
But Aiden knew better.
He remembered.
He remembered the string of disasters that followed Rick's group—how even the most capable among them were dragged down by endless emotional squabbles, poor decisions, and a lack of foresight. The number of times they chose the wrong people to trust, or walked into traps with their hearts wide open and their eyes shut. Good people, yes. Survivors, sure. But they were liabilities more often than not.
Aiden wasn't here to babysit amateur mistakes.
He wasn't here to relive someone else's story.
He was building his own.
Still, he allowed himself to glance over the edge again. It was happening almost exactly like he remembered. The tank was now swarmed. The din of moaning was deafening in the streets below. Then—
A distant voice crackled to life from inside the tank. Aiden couldn't hear it from this distance, but he could guess.
"Hey, you. Dumbass. Yeah, you in the tank. Cozy in there?"
That had to be Glenn. The radio contact. The next piece falling into place.
And sure enough, within the next half hour, Aiden watched a rooftop farther east light up with movement. Small figures—humans—moving fast. Cautious. He recognized Glenn's energy even from a distance: always quick on his feet, a little too bold for his own good. Andrea's silhouette was unmistakable. Merle's loud gestures made him stand out even from this far away. The group had gotten Rick out, as expected, and now they were doing what they always did—trapping themselves in a worse situation.
This time?
A tall department store rooftop. Surrounded.
"History's repeating," Aiden muttered, chewing on a piece of dried fruit pulled from his pack. "Same poor planning, same panic, same traps."
He thought for a moment about intervening.
He could help them—clear the fire escape, provide rooftop cover, maybe even draw off the horde with a few well-placed distractions. With his upgraded stealth skills, growing strength, and the endless space of his inventory stocked with tools, weapons, and tricks, it would be doable.
But… why?
He already knew how the story would go. For all their heart and grit, most of them wouldn't last. Not really. Not in the long run. He didn't need a group like that dragging behind him like a chain on his ankle. Especially not one with people like Merle, who would turn on you the moment it got hard. He didn't trust emotion-led leadership. He trusted logic. Efficiency. Discipline.
And besides, if the system was building the world around familiar events from the story, then it was clear: the plot was already in motion. Whether he touched it or not, it would keep moving forward. People would live, people would die.
Let Rick be Rick.
Let Glenn be Glenn.
Aiden had his own goals, his path.
And unlike them, he wasn't here to repeat the old world's mistakes.
He stood up slowly, slinging the duffel bag over his shoulder and strapping his longbow across his back beside the katana. The skyline of Atlanta stretched before him like a broken kingdom—waiting to be mapped, scavenged, and claimed.
Behind him, the moaning of the horde grew louder, trapped below the rooftops. Somewhere in that chaos, the so-called "main characters" of this story were scrambling for survival.
But Aiden?
He was writing his own book.
And this wasn't their chapter.
[Author's Note:]I decided to give Aiden Filipino-American heritage to bring more cultural depth and representation into the story. It felt like a meaningful direction that adds to who he is—not just his look, but how he loves, survives, and helps others in the world of The Walking Dead. Thanks for being open to the evolution of his character.
Hey everyone!I've seen a lot of comments and messages about the idea of shipping Aiden with Maggie, and I just wanted to say—I hear you! While Aiden and Maggie haven't crossed paths yet in the story, I do think there's a lot of potential there.
That said, I want to build it up naturally and make it feel earned, so the relationship won't happen right away. But yes, I'll definitely be exploring that connection in later chapters. Thanks for all the support and excitement—it means a lot and helps shape where this story goes!
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