Ross.
Crouching low, Ross Bolton slowly worked his way along behind the stunted hedge growing alongside the water. Quietly, careful not to make any noise, Bolton slowly raised his head, peering through the twisted foliage until he spotted his quarry once more.
It was hard to believe that badgers had once been thought of as relatively harmless creatures, too small to be any real threat to a human. Of course, that had been in the days before they they could grow to nearly six feet in length and before they weighed several hundred pounds. Before the bombs had started flying again and the world had truly gone to hell. That had been two centuries ago now. Back when the land had been known as the United Kingdom.
Before raising his rifle Ross slowly turned his head left and right. It appeared he had gotten lucky, the badger was a full grown male, but it appeared to be alone. Had he come across a pack, then fighting wouldn't be an option. One man wouldn't last long against six of these creatures, and that would be a small pack, Ross had heard of groups of up to twenty all occupying the same territory and defending the same sett.
Across the stream the badger paused, raising it's powerful snout in the air and sniffing several times before lowering it's head once more and trundling forward. As quietly as he could Bolton raised his ancient rifle and braced the stock against his shoulder, squinting his left eye as he peered through the scope he had attached to the Lee Enfield. The gun was a family heirloom, passed from father to son since it had first been issued to a long forgotten great grandfather in 1927, making the gun three hundred and fifty years old.
The cross-hair etched into the scope's lens danced back and forth along the length of the creature's striped head, showing Ross a close up view of the large, heavy skull and powerful neck. He had to get the shot right or the .303 round would ricochet harmlessly off the thick bone, angering the creature and giving away his position at the same time. Bolton slowed his breathing as he carefully aimed for the creature's eye, trying to anticipate the creature's movements. Exhaling slowly, Ross squeezed the trigger. The badger's eye popped as the bullet passed through it, blood spurting from the wound as the shot bounced around inside the skull, pulverizing the brain.
As the mutated badger collapsed to the ground, it's body spasming, Ross quickly drew the combat knife from his belt and began looking for a gap in the hedge. He forced his way through a small break in the stunted branches, then took a few rapid steps and vaulted across the irradiated water. He would have to be quick now. The shot would have been heard and would draw the attention of predators, both animal and human. Usually he would not have made the shot so close to a town as he tried to avoid encounters with bands of raiders and feral Shufflers. But he hadn't eaten in days and the weather was turning, getting colder. If he moved quickly then he should be able to skin the beast and cut a meal or two from it's carcass before he had move to on.
Working quickly with the knife Bolton opened the flesh of the beast, splitting it from groin to sternum, taking care not to pierce the organs inside. It was bloody work, but Ross had done it many times in the past and cut with the efficiency of a skilled butcher. Once the hide had been removed from the creature Bolton swiftly removed a few choice cuts of meat from the carcass. He wrapped these carefully inside of the badger's pelt then slipped the bundle inside his worn old rucksack. Shouldering the bag Ross took another run-up and jumped back across the stream. Passing back through the gap in the hedge Bolton remained low as he crossed the the old, overgrown remains of a road, sickly looking grass poking up through cracks in the surface as nature slowly took back the area. Across the road loomed the twisted, blackened remains of a forest. Ross slipped into it's cool shadows, grateful for the cover it provided as he moved deeper into the gloom. He decided he would move away from the town and keep moving, at least for a few hours. He wanted to put a lot of miles between himself and any people before he risked lighting a fire.
He would have to do it, he knew this. The meat needed to be cooked before he could eat it and the hide needed to be cured before it started to rot and became useless to him. It was necessary but it always came with an element of risk as the flames would attract as many predators as it would keep away. Most of the wildlife was still shy of the flames and would give him a wide berth unless starving or particularly crazed. But the human raiders and the shufflers held no great fear of fire and wouldn't be deterred by it, instead they would be drawn to the glow and the tell-tale smoke, the fire a beacon as they hunted him. He would try to keep the fire small, try not to allow it to produce too much smoke. It would have to be enough. Bolton couldn't die here, he'd finally stored up enough currency, if the rumours were true. He would build his fire and eat well tonight and in the morning he would continue north. North to the ruins of Liverpool and the shipyards where he could buy passage west. West to America. If the rumours were true then America survived the war mostly intact, the population taking shelter in huge underground vaults and waiting out the devastation while their mechanical servants rebuilt the surface for them to repopulate.
Two centuries should have been more than enough time for the nation to have rebuilt itself to the point where it was ready to begin accepting refugees. If the rumours were true.