He sank down on the bed. And the woman had reacted in the wrong way.
After a moment Robert Neville frowned. If what she had said was true, she’d been wandering around for a week. She would naturally be exhausted and weak, and under those conditions the smell of so much garlic could have made her retch.
His fists thudded down onto the mattress. He still didn’t know, then, not for certain. And, objectively, he knew he had no right to decide on inadequate evidence. It was something he’d learned the hard way, something he knew and believed absolutely.
He was still sitting there when she unlocked the bathroom door and came out. She stood in the hall a moment looking at him, then went into the living room. He rose and followed. When he came into the living room she was sitting on the couch.
“Are you satisfied?” she asked.
“Never mind that,” he said. “You’re on trial, not me.”
She looked up angrily as if she meant to say something. Then her body slumped and she shook her head. He felt a twinge of sympathy for a moment. She looked so helpless, her thin hands resting on her lap. She didn’t seem to care any more about her torn dress. He looked at the slight swelling of her breast.
Her figure was very slim, almost curveless. Not at all like the woman he’d used to envision. Never mind that, he told himself, that doesn’t matter any more.
He sat down in the chair and looked across at her. She didn’t return his gaze.
“Listen to me,” he said then. “I have every reason to suspect you of being infected. Especially now that you’ve reacted in such a way to garlic.”
She said nothing.
“Haven’t you anything to say?” he asked.
She raised her eyes.
“You think I’m one of them,” she said.
“I think you might be.”
“And what about this?” she asked, holding up her cross.
“That means nothing,” he said.
“I’m awake,” she said. “I’m not in a coma.”
He said nothing. It was something he couldn’t argue with, even though it didn’t assuage doubt.
“I’ve been in Inglewood many times,” he said finally, “Why didn’t you hear my car?”
“Inglewood is a big place,” she said.
He looked at her carefully, his fingers tapping on the arm of the chair.
“I’d — like to believe you,” he said.
“Would you?” she asked. Another stomach contraction hit her and she bent over with a gasp, teeth clenched. Robert Neville sat there wondering why he didn’t feel more compassion for her. Emotion was a difficult thing to summon from the dead, though. He had spent it all and felt hollow now, without feeling.
After a moment she looked up. Her eyes were hard.
“I’ve had a weak stomach all my life,” she said. “I saw my husband killed last week. Torn to pieces. Right in front of my eyes I saw it. I lost two children to the plague. And for the past week I’ve been wandering all over. Hiding at night, not eating more than a few scraps of food. Sick with fear, unable to sleep more than a couple of hours at a time. Then I hear someone shout at me. You chase me over a field, hit me, drag me to your house. Then when I get sick because you shove a plate of reeking garlic in my face, you tell me I’m infected!”
Her hands twitched in her lap. “What do you expect to happen?” she said angrily.
She slumped back against the couch back and closed her eyes. Her hands picked nervously at her skirt. For a moment she tried to tuck in the torn piece, but it fell down again and she sobbed angrily.
He leaned forward in the chair. He was beginning to feel guilty now, in spite of suspicions and doubts. He couldn’t help it. He had forgotten about sobbing women. He raised a hand slowly to his beard and plucked confusedly as he watched her.
“Would . . .“ he started. He swallowed. “Would you let me take a sample of your blood?” he asked. “I could–”
She stood up suddenly and stumbled toward the door.
He got up quickly.
“What are you doing?” he asked.
She didn’t answer. Her hands fumbled, awkwardly with the lock.
“You can’t go out there,” he said, surprised. “The street will be full of them in a little while.”
“I’m not staying here,” she sobbed. “What’s the difference if they kill me?”
His hands closed over her arm. She tried to pull away. “Leave me alone!” she cried. “I didn’t ask to come here. You dragged me here. Why don’t you leave me alone?”
He stood by her awkwardly, not knowing what to say.
“You can’t go out,” he said again.
He led her back to the couch. Then he went and got her a small tumbler of whisky at the bar. Never mind whether she’s infected or not, he thought, never mind.
He handed her the tumbler. She shook her head.
“Drink it,” he said. “It’ll calm you down.”
She looked up angrily. “So you can shove more garlic in my face?”
He shook his head.
“Drink it now,” he said.
After a few moments she took the glass and took a sip of the whisky. It made her cough. She put the tumbler on the arm of the couch and a deep breath shook her body.
“Why do you want me to stay?” she asked unhappily.
He looked at her without a definite answer in his mind. Then he said, “Even if you are infected, I can’t let you go out there. You don’t know what they’d do to you.”
Her eyes closed. “I don’t care,” she said.
“I don’t understand it,” he told her over supper. “Almost three years now, and still there are some of them alive. Food supplies are ‘being used up. As far as I know, they still lie in a coma during the day.” He shook his head. “But they’re not dead. Three years and they’re not dead. What keeps them going?”
She was wearing his bathrobe. About five she had relented, taken a bath, and changed. Her slender body was shapeless in the voluminous terry-cloth folds. She’d borrowed his comb and drawn her hair back into a pony tail fastened with a piece of twine.
Ruth fingered her coffee cup.
“We used to see them sometimes,” she said. “We were afraid to go near them, though. We didn’t think we should touch them.”
“Didn’t you know they’d come back after they died?”
She shook her head. “No.”
“Didn’t you wonder about the people who attacked your house at night?”
“It never entered our minds that they were–” She shook her head slowly. “It’s hard to believe something like that.”
“I suppose,” he said.
He glanced at her as they sat eating silently. It was hard too to believe that here was a normal woman. Hard to believe that, after all these years, a companion had come. It was more than just doubting her. It was doubting that anything so remarkable could happen in such a lost world.
“Tell me more about them,” Ruth said.
He got up and took the coffeepot off the stove. He poured more into her cup, into his, then replaced the pot and sat down.
“How do you feel now?” he asked her.
“I feel better, thank you.”
He nodded and spooned sugar into his coffee. He felt her eyes on him as he stirred. What’s she thinking? he wondered. He took a deep breath, wondering why the tightness in him didn’t break. For a while he’d thought that he trusted her. Now he wasn’t sure.
“You still don’t trust me,” she said, seeming to read his mind.
He looked up quickly, then shrugged.
“It’s — not that,” he said.
“Of course it is,” she said quietly. She sighed. “Oh, very well. If you have to check my blood, check it.”
He looked at her suspiciously, his mind questioning: Is it a trick? He hid the movement of his throat in swallowing coffee. It was stupid, he thought, to be so suspicious.
He put down the cup.
“Good,” he said. “Very good.”
He looked at her as she stared into the coffee.
“If you are infected,” he told her, “I’ll do everything I can to cure you.”
Her eyes met his. “And if you can’t?” she said.
Silence a moment.
“Let’s wait and see,” he said then.
They both drank coffee. Then he asked, “Shall we do it now?”
“Please,” she said, “in the morning. I — still feel a little ill.”