“Well, you did.”
“I know and I wish I hadn’t.”
I shake my head. “We need to stop wishing for things.”
“How ‘bout we start doing things instead.” He stands and offers me his hand. “Walk with me. I’ll show you where I live.”
Chapter Six
The rain has left the world looking shiny and bright. When we hit the sidewalk outside my building, I’m pleasantly surprised to find no evidence of the zombies we killed out here last night. Since no more showed up later on, I’m assuming the rain took care of Ryan’s blood too. Everything is as it should be, aside from the eight corpses now rotting in a nearby room inside. But that actually works to my advantage. They’ll mask my scent and keep zombies and animals both away. Animals don’t like the dead when they’re walking and they certainly don’t like them when they’re rotting for the last time. If it weren’t for Ryan knowing about me, I could stay here.
I’m not crazy and I’m not so stubborn that I can’t entertain the idea that he’s on the up and up. He may very well be able to keep me a secret, no matter what happens with him and his crew. But it’s a big question mark and one too dangerous to gamble on. I want to stay, I really do, and honestly I want to trust him. But I don’t. I can’t.
“You should get a rain system started.” he whispers, poking his head around a building and scanning the road.
“I’ve got one.”
“The bucket?”
I shrug. “Among other things.”
“In other places?” he asks, looking at me sideways. I return his stare but I don’t answer. Eventually he nods. “It’s smart. It’s better than going to the holes.”
“I never go to the holes.”
“Good.”
I frown at him. “Why do you care?”
He chuckles and shakes his head.
“What?” I ask, annoyed at being laughed at.
“It’s a weird question.”
“No it’s not. It’s a good one. Why are you so concerned with me and how I manage?”
“Because I’m a human being.”
“I’m human and I don’t care how you survive.”
“Really? Is that why you ran out of your apartment after me this morning?”
He has me there and I don’t feel like talking or thinking about that so I look away, scanning the crumbling buildings around us. There’s no movement. No animals or otherwise. I remember enough about life before to know it should be weird, but these days, it’s really not. There’s not enough of us out here, dead or alive, to make a lot of noise.
“I just…” He hesitates, running his hand over his face once. “Don’t get mad, but you’re a girl. There aren’t many women left around here and even fewer young, pretty ones. I worry what will happen if the wrong person sees you.”
“I make it a point not to be seen.”
He looks at me, his face serious. “I see you.”
I hold his eyes, seeing how golden they are in the morning light. How warm.
“I made a mistake.” I whisper.
“By helping me?” He doesn’t sound hurt. Only curious.
I shake my head and shrug, looking away. I don’t know. I don’t regret helping him, even with what it has cost me. I don’t regret letting him into my home and letting him fill the empty space. I don’t regret showing him the movie and the music. But most importantly, I don’t regret telling him to go.
“Promise not to get mad again?”
I laugh and shake my head. “No.”
“Okay. I’ll say it anyway. Come with me.”
I take a deep breath, knowing where this is going. It’s going where it always goes when people find me, the lost little lamb out in the wild all alone, and they want to save me. And years ago, I would go with them. I would let them help me and I would watch them die and I would be alone all over again.
“I am coming with you. You’re showing me your home.” I say, dodging the request.
“You know what I mean. Come with me permanently. Stay with the gang. You’ll be safer.”
I snort a laugh. “Yeah right. You just said I’m at risk with all the men out here. Now you want me to move in with a mob of them. No thank you.”
“I can keep you safe there.”
“How? By claiming me? Making me yours and keeping me in your bed so I don’t wind up pushed into someone else’s? Or worse, passed around like a toy?”
He doesn’t answer right away and I feel my blood boil.
“It wouldn’t be like that. That’s not what I’m suggesting.” he finally says calmly. “I would never—I’d never be a threat to you. I’d make sure no one else was either.”
“No thanks.” I tell him curtly.
“I—“ He takes a deep breath and lets it out harshly. “This all came out wrong.”
“Hopefully, yeah. Look, I get it. You want to help me and I believe you. If you were willing to do something heinous, you’d have done it last night. It would have been easy. But how is it a good idea to bring me somewhere that you have to protect me all the time? And what happens if you’re gone? What if you die? Can I just walk out the door or do I belong to the gang then?”
He doesn’t answer and I’m done because I’m right.
“I’m better off as I am.”
“Yeah. Yeah, I guess you are.” he says quietly. I can tell this really bothers him. He’s sorry he can’t help me and I hate that. I don’t need help. I’ve got this. I’ve had it under control all on my own for years now and I don’t need some knight in shining armor to come running up and save me.
As we walk in silence I see the park peek through between the buildings. The tall trees that have overrun the area standing proud and waving in the light breeze. Crenshaw is in there. Crenshaw who has never offered me help beyond what I ask for. Who makes his trades with me, offers his advice when asked and then pisses off. Crenshaw who never calls me by my name.
“Thank you.” I blurt out, surprising us both.
His brows pinch in confusion. “I thought you were mad at me. What are you thanking me for?”
“I am. I’m kinda mad at you. But you’re being nice.”
“You’re mad at me for being nice?”
“No, I’m thanking you for being nice.”
“I am so confused.”
I grin at him. “Me too.”
“Joss, I want you to understand that—“
“Shhhh! Shut up!” I whisper harshly, grabbing his arm and pulling him down into a crouch with me. “Look.”
A deer. It’s strolling slowly, almost casual, as though it doesn’t have a care in the world. Not for zombies and certainly not for us.
“What do you want to do?” he whispers, leaning his head close. “Do you want to go for it?”
I nod excitedly. “I haven’t had anything but rabbit in forever.”
“Not stealthy enough to take down a deer?” he asks, smirking at me.
I glare at him. “Not alone, no, and neither are you. But if we work together…”
“I thought you don’t play well with others.”
I chuckle softly. “Ryan, for a chance at deer meat, I can be very agreeable.”
“I’ll believe it when I see it. It’s heading for the park. Let’s cut over a block so we can run without spooking it.”
We rise slowly out of our crouch, trying not to land in the deer’s peripheral. Once we’re clear of its sightline we take off at a sprint, running quietly down the street on the balls of our feet, landing on as little surface as possible to make the least amount of noise. We have to push through tall grass and dodge cars and rubble. Fallen street signs and sections of buildings. A refrigerator it looks like some idiots threw off a roof for fun. I wonder briefly, since we’re in his neighborhood, if it was Ryan’s band of idiots that did it.
When we reach the edge of the park we find that we beat the deer here. We quickly hide crouched down in a row of thick bushes just on the edge of the park where we can see the break in the trees where he’s going to come in. I get impatient and stand up briefly, looking for him. He’s walking so slowly I wonder if he’s not sick. I don’t want to eat rancid deer meat and get sick again. Food poisoning is deadly and I’ve only had to deal with it once. All I can say is thank goodness I had my toilet.