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“No can do.”

“Why not?”

“I’m not gonna leave my house just because some paranoid, redneck asshole thinks he can force me out.”

“Put your pride aside, man. You can come back once things cool off a bit.”

“And who’s to say that’s going to happen?”

“The dome will come down,” Maya said before Reno could answer. “It has to.”

Sean raised his eyebrows. “Does it?”

Maya stared at him for a moment before looking away. She felt her face flushing and butterflies taking flight in her stomach. She was responsible for Laura and Aiden, so she couldn’t believe otherwise. This craziness would end. It had to.

Sean shifted his gaze to Reno. “What are you two doing here, anyway?”

“You’re the one guy I know who has all this.” Reno gestured to the guns in the room. “I was hoping we could borrow a few.”

Sean laughed. He looked back and forth between his two guests, and then the smile disappeared.

“You’re serious?”

“You’re the only one here. Do you really need all of these?”

“With no idea of what’s next? Yeah, I do. We don’t know if that dome is ever coming down. We’re like rats in a cage, dude. Besides food and water, what do you think the next most precious commodity is going to be?”

“I’m not asking for much. A couple of pistols and maybe a shotgun. And enough ammunition to get us by. Maya and I need protection.”

“I’m sorry, Reno, I can’t do it.”

Reno shook his head. “I can’t believe you, man. After all I’ve done for you. That thing with your mom?”

“Not fair. Don’t bring that into this.”

“You know as well as I do she would have died if I hadn’t have been there to help her.”

“Screw you, Reno. None of that means shit right now.”

“Whatever.” Reno turned away and headed for the back door. “Let’s go, Maya. Coming here was a mistake.”

Outside, a car horn blared, freezing Maya and Reno.

Sean went to the window, used two fingers to split the blinds, and gazed upon the street. “Shit.”

“Who’s out there?” Reno asked.

“Who you think?”

Sean went to the sofa and picked up two handguns. He placed them in holsters, one on each hip. Then he picked up an assault rifle, made sure it was loaded, and went to the front door.

“What are you doing?” Reno asked.

“Protecting myself and my property. Second amendment.”

“You going to shoot him?” Maya asked.

“Don’t do this, Sean,” Reno said.

Sean unlocked the door and opened it. “Stay here and don’t get involved.” He slammed the door behind him.

“Shit!”

“Do you think he’ll really shoot that guy?” Maya asked, catching Reno’s eye.

“I don’t know.” Reno clasped his hands behind his head. He then went to the door.

“You’re not going out there.”

“I have to! I can’t let him do something stupid. Something he’ll regret forever.”

Outside, they heard Sean shouting at another man.

“Don’t go out there,” Maya said. “I don’t want you to get—”

A gunshot from the street rattled Maya. She dropped to the ground and covered her head. Reno ducked into another room.

Maya waited for more gunshots, but they never came.

“Oh, shit,” Reno said. “Sean!”

19

Blood splattered the window.

Reno opened the door and raised his hands to his head when he saw Sean’s body lying on the porch.

Maya jumped up and rushed to the door, but when she saw Sean’s body, she immediately knew he was dead.

“Sean,” Reno said, dropping down next to him—without apparent consideration for what else was happening nearby.

“Get back inside,” Maya said, her words soft and her hands shaking.

She counted six men in the road. One said something as she watched, and then two others flanked him, walking toward the house.

“Now!” Maya pulled on Reno’s arm. “He’s gone. We can’t help him.”

Reno grabbed the assault rifle Sean had carried outside before racing back into the house with Maya. He slammed the door shut and locked it. Maya hurried to the back door and did the same. The two met in the living room.

Footsteps sounded from the front porch, and the men outside knocked on the door.

“Let us in, and this will end best for all of us,” one of the men said.

“No way I’m opening that door,” Reno said quietly to Maya.

“We’ve got to get in the rig and get out of here before they go into the backyard and find it. They’re going to want everything inside.”

Reno nodded at her. “Let’s grab what we can and get out of here.”

Maya took a pistol and a shotgun off the table. She shoved the pistol into the back of her pants and winced as the cold steel of the barrel touched the skin at the small of her back. Then she grabbed boxes of ammunition.

“We’re getting tired of waiting out here!” the man on the porch said loudly. “Let us in, and we’ll take what we want. Then you can leave. But if you don’t… well, I must say that the woman I saw in there looked quite lovely. I might have to have a little fun with her, whether she likes it or not.”

Reno bit his lip and took a few stomps toward the door before Maya stopped him with a hand on his arm. She said, “There’s at least six of them, maybe more. Let’s go now and hope they’re not already at the back door.”

He stared at the front door for another second, but then said, “You’re right. Come on.”

They hurried out the back door as the men at the front continued to pound on the door, their fists getting louder. Maya sighed, thankful the men had not yet circled around the house.

Reno ripped the tarp off the rig while Maya hopped into the driver’s seat. She waited for Reno to get in before she stuck the keys in the ignition, not wanting to crank up the engine and draw attention until the last possible moment. He jumped in then, and she’d already started to turn the key when she had a thought.

“Get us out of here,” Reno said.

“We can’t leave yet.”

“The hell we can’t. Go!”

“No, we can’t. We’re going to leave all those guns inside? Once we take off, they’re going to break in and take them. And then none of the people who live around here will stand a chance.”

“We don’t have time to go back inside—there are too many weapons to grab in one trip and get out of here, Maya.”

Maya saw something red in the weeds on the edge of the lawn.

“Maya!”

“Jump in the driver’s seat and be ready to get us out of here.” She got out, ignoring Reno. Maya ran to the weeds and picked up a red gas can. She shook it, feeling about a gallon sloshing around inside the two-and-a-half gallon can. Maya glanced at the rig to see the look on Reno’s face—his mouth was open and his eyes were wide—before sprinting back into the house through the back door.

Maya filled a blue plastic bag with as much snack food as she could grab off the kitchen counter and then tied it through a belt loop.

After running through the kitchen, she dumped the gasoline onto the sofa and all over the carpet. She soaked the furniture. Then she grabbed the Zippo, the buck knife, and the penlight off the coffee table. Maya hoped the men were too stupid or cocky to send someone around to the back door—at least, not so quickly. Otherwise, things would get more complicated, and in a hurry.

“All right,” the man outside said suddenly. The pounding on the door had stopped, and she realized they were out of time. “We tried playing nice. Now we’re gonna have to break this door down.”

Stupid and cocky, she thought.