So every night, she went out to scavenge. The first few nights, she only took Knife, but it was a good chance to take the others farther than they were used to. One at a time, of course—she wasn’t sure every house was unoccupied. Sometimes she heard a car engine or a gunshot, but these were always distant. She avoided any house with buckets on the roof for collecting water or gardens in back. There weren’t many of those.
One day, she turned on the hospital sink and nothing came out but a sputter of air. On her nightly runs, she started looking for water, too, and cans of soda for herself.
She was out with Knife and Smiles that night. Outside a Spanish house with broken windows, she turned to Smiles.
“Sit,” she said. Smiles sat. “Stay.”
She went inside with Knife, moving quickly through the cabinets. When she came back outside, Smiles was nowhere to be seen.
She moved to the corner, straining her ears for the click of claws. Noise could get you killed, but she had no other choice. Not if she wanted to see Smiles again. She whistled. Knife peered into the night, nose twitching. Raina whistled again, then jogged back past the house to the next block. She whistled a third time. Down the street, Smiles lifted his head from the bush he was snuffling.
Raina ran to grab him. “Come on, stupid. Time to go home.”
She went back to the house for her wagon and headed for the hospital. After a few blocks, something scraped behind her. Raina whirled into a crouch. Knife growled, but the street was empty.
At the hospital, she unloaded the night’s catch and dumped beef stew over kibbles. She thought about punishing Smiles by withholding the stew, but he wouldn’t understand. After dinner, she bagged up the trash, which was full, and took it to the underground parking next door. She went to bed.
Hours later, Raina snapped awake. She’d heard an engine outside. There was no sound now. She got up and went to the door to the front office, standing on her tiptoes to peer through its small window.
A flashlight beamed through the front windows into the hospital’s reception area. Raina held perfectly still as the light swept through the front room, passing from the reception desk to the empty shelves that had once held bags of food. The woman outside wore a dark uniform and had a silver badge on her chest.
The officer tried the door. Finding it locked, she flipped her flashlight around, and cocked her arm to smash it into the door.
Raina flung open the door to the back room. “Stop! We’re in here!”
The woman drew a pistol, shining the flashlight in Raina’s eyes. “Show me your hands!”
Raina lifted them. The officer flicked the beam of the flashlight across the room, then back to Raina.
She lowered the gun, voice muffled by the glass. “Can you open the door?”
Raina hesitated. “How’d you know I was here?”
“Someone said a little girl was here. All alone except for a few dogs. Is that true?”
Was she there to help? Like Raina’s dad had said someone would be? Raina nodded to the officer and unlocked the door. “Who saw me?”
The woman walked inside, casting her light past the front counter. “Another survivor. He thought it would be better if I came by. What’s your name?”
“Raina.”
“Hi, Raina. I’m Officer Morgan. Are you okay?”
“I’m fine.”
“My friend said you had dogs here. Are they okay?”
“Some of them bark too much. And one likes to sniff too far.”
The officer smiled. “Can I see them?”
Raina brought her to the back room. The dogs swarmed around Officer Morgan’s legs. Smiles and Eggplant jumped up on her. Tough and Tooth barked. The Chihuahuas backed away, hackles standing straight up. The officer bent to scratch their ears and thump their backs.
After they calmed down, Officer Morgan straightened, rubbing her hand over her mouth. “You can’t care for all these animals.”
“Yeah I can. I have food for them.”
“What’ve you got?”
“Kibbles,” she said. “And the meat they like.”
“Dog food. Right.” Officer Morgan folded her arms, looking down at Raina just like her teachers used to do. “What about water?”
“I filled lots of jugs,” Raina replied proudly. “And I have more on the roof for the rain.”
“It’s almost summer. You’ll be lucky if it rains an inch between now and November.”
Raina frowned. She tried to think of a place nearby where water flowed, but the only place she could remember was the ocean. “Then we’ll have to find more.”
Officer Morgan turned toward the front of the building. After a long moment, she smiled at Raina. “Tell you what. I have a place in the hills. It’s near a reservoir. I’ve got food. Water. And all kinds of room for dogs. If you’ll help me farm it, you can come stay there.”
“But this is my home.”
“It isn’t safe here. There are bad men out in the streets. This place is away from that.”
Raina thought for a moment. “Is it just you at the farm?”
“Sure.” Officer Morgan smiled deeper, eyes crinkling. “And a whole bunch of dogs.”
Raina lowered her eyes to the animals. She’d worked so hard to build their home here. They had food and medicine; she didn’t know which pills did what, but there were books that would tell her so. They knew the streets and homes around them.
But the animal hospital was on the main road. There was nowhere to grow food. There was no lake or stream. Sooner or later, they’d have to move—if the other survivors didn’t come for them first.
“Okay,” she said. “Let’s go.”
Officer Morgan placed her hand on Raina’s shoulder, then walked around the hospital, assessing the animals. “Let’s take the big ones first. Then we’ll come back for the little guys and anything else you want to bring.”
She had a K-9 van parked on a side street down the block. Raina led Brick, Smiles, Tough, Teeth, and Eggplant to it. Officer Morgan helped them into the back. They returned to the hospital to load bags of food on the wagon and lock up. As they closed the door, Knife darted out to stand beside Raina.
“Can he come?” Raina said. “He goes everywhere with me.”
“Why not?”
They got in the van, Knife riding on Raina’s lap. Officer Morgan checked to make sure Raina was buckled in before driving away. As they headed north through the night, fear fluttered in Raina’s heart. She’d done fine on her own, hadn’t she? Why leave with the officer? But she thought of what was best for the dogs, and she calmed down.
Officer Morgan stayed off the highways, traveling down side streets and avoiding the bigger roads, many of which were clogged with cars. The towers were black bricks against the sky. The officer asked her lots of things about how she’d survived the last few months. What she’d seen. Whether anyone had tried to hurt her—and whether she’d had to hurt anyone back.
“I had to run and hide sometimes,” Raina said. “But that’s it.”
“You’re lucky.” Officer Morgan slowed to ease the van through a tangle of cars. “It’s bad out there.”
They drove for miles. Raina thought they were headed north, but she didn’t know the parts of the city they were traveling through. Bodies lay on sidewalks, bones beginning to show through what was left of their skin. Knife climbed behind her seat and curled up on a towel there.
In time, hills loomed before them. The van slowed. Ahead, another intersection was blocked with wrecked cars. Officer Morgan swore, glanced at Raina, and turned the van around, coming to a stop.
“Raina, there’s a map under your seat. Can you dig it out for me?”
Raina slipped her head under her shoulder strap and leaned forward. There were several maps under the seat. She got them out and turned to Officer Morgan.