You don't remember...much. You rise slowly, stiffly from the floor and stagger forward. Actually, you don't stagger so much as you shuffle. You walk through what used to be your stronghold. All around you are the bullet-riddled bodies of beings that are disturbingly similar to yourself. You did that. You killed them all. In fact, your hand is still holding a gun. It feels hot. You look at it. In another lifetime, it was a weapon, a tool for self-defense. Now it is alien to you. You drop it on the bloody floor.
You venture outside, through the hole that was breached by the Horde. The building front door got ripped off its hinges. This is what the Horde does. It's time to join the Horde. A Horde that you destroyed...in another lifetime. You stumble down the steps through the building that was once your last redoubt. In another life, you lived here with your wife and son. They're gone now. Once upon a time, the thought of them was painful. Now, it means nothing. Absolutely nothing. Onward you march, driven by hunger.
You make it downstairs, through several flights of stairs. Your bloody hands push against the front door. It gives way, not because you are strong but because the Horde damaged it on its way in. Finally, you are outside. You see other beings like yourself. A tall blonde girl with half her face missing. A chubby Asian man dragging himself across the pavement. Like you, they are dead yet moving. What drives them? It's not the vaunted zombie virus. It's the hunger.
The streets are crowded with others like yourself. You walk past beings that used to be friends and neighbors. You are still wearing the Walmart uniform you had on when all hell broke loose a few days ago. Your nametag says Steve but that name means nothing to you. Names are for people. You're not a person. You're not even an animal. You are a thing. You never made it home. You hid in this building that used to be full of people. Someone got infected. That was all it took...
"Steve, all hell is breaking loose," said your manager Carole. You showed up at Walmart that day and found all your co-workers huddled around the TV in the breakroom. Men, women, black, white and brown, everyone was glued to the TV. The news anchor spoke about people exhibiting violent behavior in downtown Washington D.C. and the Capital police being backed up by the National Guard. The President commented on the sad state of the affairs in urban America. Same shit, different day.