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The world beneath the dense canopy of the state forest was a place of deep, green silence. The narrow gravel road was a tunnel through a landscape that felt ancient and untouched by the plague that had devoured the cities. For two days, they traveled through this new wilderness, the sputtering protest of the van’s dying engine the only man-made sound for miles. They were utterly alone, a feeling that was both a comfort and a terror.

Their supplies were critically low. The MREs were gone. They were living on what little Lena could forage—bitter greens, edible roots, and a handful of berries that left a sharp, tallic taste in their mouths. The children were lethargic, their faces pale from hunger. The fragile peace of their isolation was being eroded by the slow, grinding pressure of starvation.

Hex had not given up on the radio. It was his obsession, his link to the world that had been. He sat in the passenger seat for hours on end, a pair of headphones pressed to his ears, his fingers constantly adjusting the sensitive dials, sweeping through the dead frequencies. It was mostly static, the sound of an empty universe. But then, late one afternoon, as Quinn was navigating a particularly rough patch of road, Hex’s hand shot up.

"Wait," he hissed, his eyes wide. "Stop the van."

Quinn brought the vehicle to a halt. The silence of the forest rushed in. Hex closed his eyes, his entire being focused on the faint sounds in his headphones. He fiddled with a dial, his touch delicate. A voice, thin and crackling with static, but undeniably human, leaked from the headphones.

Hex unplugged them, connecting the radio to a small, salvaged speaker. The voice filled the cramped cab of the van.

"...the sunstone sees the water. I repeat, for those who walk the lonely road, the sunstone sees the water. The bell does not ring. Find the quiet valley. We are waiting."

The ssage repeated, a continuous, cryptic loop. It was not military. It was not official. The cadence was calm, asured. It was a ssage ant for those who knew how to listen.

"What the hell is a sunstone?" Quinn asked, his brows furrowed.

"It’s a code," Hex said, his excitent palpable. This was the first clear, intelligent human transmission he had heard since the fall. "A recognition phrase. Sothing to keep the desperate and the dangerous from just showing up. ’The bell does not ring’... maybe a reference to a town without a church? ’The quiet valley’... it’s a location."

"Or it’s a trap," Quinn said imdiately, the mory of the clinic, of the initial hope followed by the bloody, chaotic siege, still a fresh wound. "A new group of vultures using a fancy lure to draw in prey."

"Maybe," Hex conceded. "But the signal is stable, low-power, and highly directional. It’s coming from the northwest. It’s not a broadcast ant to be heard by everyone. It’s a whisper. Traps are usually loud, Quinn. They’re designed to attract the most people possible."

Lena, who had been listening from the back, leaned forward. "We have to investigate," she said, her voice firm. Lily was asleep in her lap, her breathing shallow. "Look at these children, Quinn. Look at us. We’re starving. The van is about to die. Roaming like this isn’t a strategy; it’s a slow death. This is the first sign of organized life we’ve encountered in weeks. We have to take the chance."

Her argunt was sound, but Quinn’s caution was a hard-won instinct. "We took a chance on the clinic, Lena. Look how that ended. We lost good people."

"We also saved these children because we took that chance," she countered, her gaze unwavering. "Risk is the only currency we have left."

The debate was interrupted by a sudden, sharp thump against the side of the van. Quinn and Hex reacted instantly, grabbing their weapons. Through the grated window, Quinn saw them. Four figures, erging from the dense woods. They were thin to the point of emaciation, their faces gaunt, their eyes burning with a desperate, predatory hunger. They were ard with crude spears and clubs.

"They want the van," Hex said, his voice low.

"Everybody stay down!" Quinn commanded.

One of the n, clearly the leader, stepped forward. "Get out of the truck!" he yelled, his voice a ragged croak. "Leave the food, and we’ll let you walk."

It was a lie, and everyone knew it. They would take their supplies, their vehicle, and then their lives.

"Not happening," Quinn said, loud enough for them to hear.

The leader snarled and gave a signal. The four survivors charged the van from different directions. They were not infected, but their desperation made them just as dangerous. One of them threw a heavy rock, which bounced harmlessly off the reinforced windshield. Another began trying to pry open the side door with a crowbar.

Quinn had had enough. He was not going to let his family be threatened by starving scavengers. He kicked his door open, using it as a shield, and fired his pistol once into the air. The gunshot was a deafening explosion in the silent forest.

The attackers flinched, montarily stunned by the loud report. It was the opening Quinn needed. He lunged at the man with the crowbar, his movents a blur of controlled violence. He disard him with a swift blow to the wrist and brought the butt of his pistol down on the man’s head. The man collapsed in a heap.

Hex engaged the leader, his shotgun a formidable deterrent. He did not fire, but the sight of the weapon’s wide barrel was enough to make the man hesitate. Lena, anwhile, stood in the van’s open doorway, shielding the children with her body, her scalpel held in a white-knuckled grip.

The fight was brief, nasty, and brutish. The starving survivors were no match for two trained, well-ard n fighting to protect their family. Within a minute, two of them were unconscious on the ground, and the other two had fled back into the woods.

Quinn stood over the unconscious form of the man he had taken down, his chest heaving. He felt a cold, hard anger. This was what the world had co to. The living preying on the living, fighting over the scraps of a dead civilization.

The encounter, as brutal as it was, solidified their decision. Lena was right. Roaming was no longer an option. The world was too full of desperate people. They needed a destination. They needed a haven.

They left the two unconscious n on the side of the road. They did not have the resources to take them prisoner, and Quinn did not have the heart to kill them. They were just desperate n, victims of the sa broken world.

Back in the van, the mood was somber. The fight had drained them, leaving them shaken.

"Alright," Quinn said, his voice heavy. He looked at Hex, then at Lena. "We head northwest. We try to find the source of that signal." He looked at them, his gaze intense. "But we do it my way. We stay off the main roads. We move slow. We assu everything is a trap until proven otherwise. We are not walking into another clinic."

Hex and Lena nodded in agreent. A decision had been made. Hope, however faint and dangerous, was a better motivator than slow starvation.

Hex put the headphones back on, fine-tuning the radio, trying to get a better lock on the direction of the signal. Quinn started the sputtering engine of the van and pulled back onto the gravel road, turning the vehicle northwest.

They drove deeper into the unknown, drawn forward by a cryptic whisper on the wire, a fragile promise of sanctuary in a world that had offered them nothing but pain.

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