The girls ran after Carly, passing her by to get a better look at the helicopter. Carly led Jen over, stopping every few seconds to point out something around the island. Jen looked impressed.
Will climbed up the patio and leaned against the railing next to her. “What do you think?”
Lara reached over and flicked at flecks of dirt, grass, and what looked like dried mud and flakes of concrete clinging to his brown hair. “You need a haircut.”
“About Jen.”
She looked back at the pilot. “Given how fast we’ve been going through our medical supplies, it’d be nice to re-stock. That, or we could just stop getting shot and blown up.”
“Now what would be the fun of that?”
“I forgot who I’m talking to. If you could stop getting into trouble, you wouldn’t be, well, you.”
“I’m not sure that was a compliment.”
“It wasn’t.”
“Ah.”
“But I love you anyway. Even if you do smell like rotten cabbage.”
He sniffed himself. “Yeah. It was pretty rank down there.”
She looked toward the shoreline, where she imagined the tunnel entrance was — not that she could see even a little bit of it from here. “Have you figured out why they spent all these months digging their way back in there? Could they have eventually gotten through the shack and onto the island?”
“I don’t think so. The shack’s solid steel with reinforced brick walls. Nothing’s getting through that.”
“So what were they doing down there?”
Will shook his head. “I haven’t a clue. Waiting, maybe.”
“For what?”
“Orders would be my guess. They’re foot soldiers. Have you ever heard the phrase, ‘Hurry up and wait’?”
“Is that a joke?”
He smiled. “Just something soldiers say.”
“You think she’s still out there, don’t you? Kate.”
“I know she’s out there.”
“So why hasn’t she attacked? It’s been three months.”
He looked toward the shore, and she could tell he had been turning the question over in his mind for some time now, too.
Why haven’t they attacked yet?
She remembered those anxious first few days on the island after the fight. Waiting — and fully expecting — every single day for an attack that never came. Everyone was hurt. Danny, Gaby, Maddie, even Will. She was hurt, too. Everyone.
And they waited, and waited…but it never happened. Instead of relief, each passing day without an attack was suffocating, as if they couldn’t breathe because of their own overwhelming anxiety. Or at least, it felt that way to her. Will had kept them afloat, never resting, always moving, doing everything until Danny was back on his feet. Gaby had been instrumental in those first few days and weeks, and Lara couldn’t recall a day where the teenager wasn’t stuck to Will’s hip like a devoted little sister.
“I don’t know,” Will said finally. “This island, us… What are we, in the larger scheme of things? Insignificant would be my guess. What’s a handful of stubborn humans compared to what’s going on out there, in the rest of the country? The world?”
“What is going on out there?”
“I don’t know. That’s what bothers me.”
Lara reached over and took his hand, then leaned against his shoulder.
“I thought I smelled like rotten cabbage?” he smiled.
“You do. But I’m used to it by now.”
“Okay, now I know that wasn’t a compliment.”
She laughed.
Lara watched Jen tear apart a thirteen-inch white bass, gobbling up the meat and sighing with so much pleasure that Lara felt almost guilty about not appreciating the never-ending dishes of fresh fish more than she did.
They were inside the hotel lobby watching Jen indulge her amazing appetite. A flurry of dirt blew across the marble flooring, pushed through the wide-open spaces by a sudden breeze from the open windows. The lobby was aired out against the heat, and she couldn’t imagine how much hotter it would have been without the black marble that covered the mostly finished portions of the hotel. Thank God it would be cold soon, with November and December on the horizon. But then they would have to worry about heating…
“These are insane,” Jen said.
“You have Sarah to thank for that,” Lara said. “If it was just the rest of us, you’d be eating canned fruit, SPAM, or MREs.”
“We have boxes of those disgusting MREs at the hospital. The guys ‘rescued’ them from a nearby surplus shop a few months back. Before then, we were surviving on vending machine chips, sodas, and whatever else the cafeteria had in stock before we lost it.”
“Sounds like us in the beginning,” Carly said.
“How many of you are there?” Will asked.
Jen licked her lips and reached for another fish. “Twenty-six in the beginning, but over time we added two dozen more, so forty in all.”
“That’s a lot of people.”
“It’s a big hospital.”
“But you only have the top floor.”
“Correct. The hospital itself has ten floors.”
“And you’re just doing recon out here?” Will asked. “Like you were three months ago?”
Jen nodded. “We’ve been scavenging the areas around the hospital for food, but it’s becoming scarce.” She paused. “This may sound crazy, but some of us have a theory. We think the creatures have been purposefully sabotaging food near us so we can’t use it.” She looked at them over fish bones to gauge their reaction. “Sounds nuts, right?”
“No,” Will said. He glanced over at Lara, then Carly.
Jen picked up on the look. “What? Wanna share with the new girl in class?”
“What do you know about how they did all this?” Will asked.
“I know as much as anyone, I guess, which isn’t much. Why, you guys know more?”
Will told her about what they had managed to piece together. How the ghouls took over the big cities first during The Purge, using the population to grow their army exponentially. How they then moved into the countryside on the second night, conquering the smaller cities. When he got around to the blood farms, Jen listened intently and stopped eating. He told her about the collaborators, about the blue-eyed ghoul. Lara thought Jen might gag back up everything she had eaten in the last ten minutes.
“Jesus,” Jen said when Will was finished. “We’ve been hunkered down in the hospital for all these months, just trying to keep them at bay. If what you’re saying is true, we’re truly fucked, aren’t we? Are we just delaying the inevitable?”
“Not necessarily,” Lara said. “This island, for instance, is safe. There’s something in the water — the mercury content, maybe — that the ghouls don’t like. So there are three certain ways we know of to fight them. The sun, bodies of water, and silver.”
“What about silver?”
“Silver kills them,” Will said.
He drew his knife, the one that used to be a cross but that Will had sanded down into a double-edged bladed weapon. He handed it handle-first to Jen, and she took it carefully.
“What is this, some kind of cross?” she asked.
“It used to be,” Will said. “The silver on the outer edges is what’s important. Have you tried shooting them?”
“Of course.”
“What happens?”
“Nothing. They just shrug it off.”
“Not with this. They can be killed. You just need to use the right ammunition.”
“Silver,” Jen said.
He nodded. “Silver.”
Will drew his Glock. He pulled out the magazine and thumbed a bullet free.