aimed thrusts in their direction to run
them off. They lumbered awkwardly into
the darkness.
By then, sweat trickled down his
temples and chest and his hands were
uncomfortably warm from the flaming
tree’s heat, not to mention cut and
scraped up like hell. Most of the
branches had burned off and the fire was
eating at the trunk, making its way
toward him. He looked around for
somewhere safe to put it, knowing how
quickly a whole forest could go up in
flames from one small fire.
Had he seen any water? Had they
passed anything . . . ?
He tried to think, then remembered
seeing the gleam of a shallow pool in the
indentation of a car’s hood. But where?
He heard Remy shout after him—
something obvious like
Where are you
going?
—and ignored it, running off with
the ever-flaming branch. Water or
concrete or something that could contain
the fire . . . He peered, hard to see in the
dark, and not more than ten yards from
the truck cab found a pool of water.
Dropped the branch in, rolled the fucker
around as it sizzled into nothing, and
then, dusting off his abused hands,
headed back to Remy.
“How is he?” Wyatt asked, hoisting
himself up into the truck cab. He
slammed the door behind him and turned
to Remy. He had a moment to realize that
this was a full sleeper cab, with what
had been bucket seats in the front of the
rig and in the back a compact living
space.
But then he saw Dantès, lying on a
pile of something, and Remy crouched
over the dog’s head. Blood gleamed in
the low light, but Dantès moved, giving a
whine of greeting and lifting his face as
soon as he saw Wyatt.
“This,” Remy said, looking up at him,
tears glistening in her eyes, “is precisely
why I left him behind—where he’d be
safe
!”
“Don’t be a fool,” he snapped. “If he
hadn’t been here, this would have been
you.
And then what would have
happened to that damn crystal of yours?”
R
emy
jolted,
her
hand
going
automatically to her navel. Of course he
knew she had the crystal, that she wore
it. But he didn’t know what it was or
why it was so important. How could he,
when she didn’t even know?
“Let me see him,” Wyatt was saying,
his attention refocused on Dantès. “I
need
light,”
he
added
in
that
commanding way of his that made her
want to box his ears.
No thank-you for giving him the torch
that saved their butts, no appreciation for
forcing open the truck door so he could
climb his sorry, stick-up-his-ass
ass
up
into it, no concern for whether she’d cut
or scraped herself when he shoved her
up into this messy place (which she had,
thank you very much) . . . all after
showing up unexpectedly and uninvited,
calling her a fool and snarling at her . . .
and now he was ordering her around
asking for a light.
He really was a dickhead.
Do it for Dantès, she reminded
herself. And dug out a small, manual-
powered flashlight from her pack,
ignoring the streaks of her own blood
that made it slippery. She wiped her
hand on her pants near another
bloodstain, then, with three quick cranks,
produced enough energy for a decent
beam of light. She shone it onto her
beloved pet.
It wasn’t as if she hadn’t thought of
the light before Wyatt demanded it, but
she didn’t have the chance to get to it. It
wasn’t an easy task helping an injured,
ninety-five-pound dog up into a door
five feet off the ground . . . especially
when she was only five-foot-eight and
135 pounds herself. It was the cut along
her thigh, deep enough to slice through
her cargo pants, that protested the most
and gushed a little harder. Damn. She’d
have to sew up the tear too.
Remy looked down at Dantès,
watching Wyatt’s large hands moving
gently over the dog as the canine rested
his head in her lap. She knew one thing:
the ever-angry Wyatt might despise her,
but he loved her pet as if it were his
own. He’d do anything for Dantès, as
evidenced by his actions tonight and the
tension emanating through him as he
examined the dog. At least she had that.
But there was a lot of blood. Her
insides tightened and fear burned inside
her. He couldn’t die. He
couldn’t
.
“Well?” she asked when the silence
had stretched for too long. Her fingers
clasped tightly over the flashlight while
her other hand stroked Dantès’s soft
head as she waited for her companion’s
diagnosis. She’d done a thorough
examination before Wyatt appeared, but
she was too upset to be confident in her
estimation in this case. She wanted
someone else to tell her what she thought
she knew.
“He’s going to be fine,” Wyatt said.
She saw his tension relax, and so did
she. “Aren’t you, bud?” His fingers
spread wide, he gently stroked his hand
along the length of Dantès’s torso. “Just
need a little fixing up and some rest.” He
looked up at Remy, meeting her eyes for
the first time. “He’s hurt, there’s a lot of
blood, but I didn’t find anything serious.
Nothing that shouldn’t heal up.”
She nodded, relief shuttling through
her. “That’s what I thought, but . . .”
“There is a lot of blood,” he said,
reading her mind. “But it looks worse
than it is. He’s a good fighter.”
So are you.
She looked back down at
the dog before those words slipped out.
She guessed that deep-seated anger he
always carried was good for something.
From her safe perch in the truck, she’d
watched him with a combination of
horror
and
admiration,
saw
him
swinging a small tree as if it were a
sword, dodging and feinting and
jumping, always a step ahead of the
snarling jaguar, then going back for
more.
Wyatt’s accusation rang in her
memory:
Don’t be a fool. If Dantès
hadn’t been here, this would have been
you
.
But he’d misspoken. If
he
hadn’t been
here, this would have been
both
her and
Dantès.
“By the way, nice job with the
torch,” he said, and rose to his feet. The
ceiling wasn’t quite tall enough for him
to stand fully upright, but he only had to
bend his head a little.
Remy felt a wave of guilt for her
earlier irritation; after all, he had clearly
been distracted by worry for Dantès. She
was about to thank him for saving them
when Wyatt added, “Next time, don’t
keep
screaming
my
name.
It’s
distracting.”
“Next time?” she retorted, her blood
racing again. “God forbid there should
be a next time.” The sooner she could
ditch him, the better.
She thought she heard a muffled
snort, but he’d turned away and was
examining the contents of the room or
space they were in. She couldn’t figure
out exactly what this thing was. It looked
like the front of a huge truck, like a
larger size of the Humvees driven by the
Strangers and bounty hunters, but behind
the two seats in front was something like
a small room. Almost like a tiny house
or bedroom.
There might have been a mattress
once, but the years and animals had done
a number on it, and all that was left were
the frame and springs. Cupboards, two
small chairs, and a table were made
from some woodlike material that was
still fairly intact. They took up about half
the space behind the driver’s seat and its
partner.
The only windows were in the front
of the trucklike thing: one on each side,
and the big one over the front. The glass
was only gone from the one side, though,
and although it was shattered, the front
window was still intact. Both windows
were filthy with mildew and dirt.
Nevertheless, it was a safe place to hole
up for the rest of the night. The zombies
couldn’t get up there, and it would be
nearly impossible for the jaguar or any
other animal to launch itself through the
window. She guessed it was well past
midnight and moving on toward dawn by
now, though the night was still dark as
pitch.
Dantès was going to be all right. She
was safe. She could relax.
Except for
him
.
Remy shifted out of the way,
arranging her flashlight as a general
illuminator as Wyatt inched around the
room, half bent, digging through the
contents. He made one satisfied grunt
and many disappointed noises, dropping
things into piles that seemed to be useful
versus nonuseful—the latter pile much
larger and including gnawed away
upholstery and other trash. While he did
that, she moved up to the front of the
truck and opened her pack. She had an
extra shirt that could be used to wash up
some of the blood, maybe even bandage
Dantès’s worst injuries. Eventually,
she’d need to get more clean water, but
she had some in her canteen. And so
she’d be less one shirt, but in the grand
scheme of things . . . At least the slice
alongside her wrist had stopped
bleeding, for the most part.
Despite what Wyatt might think about
her being a fool, she’d planned her
departure from the settlement of Yellow
Mountain carefully, packing a good
number of supplies. It wasn’t the first
time she’d had to make a quick escape.
She was used to it.
And when Dantès showed up
yesterday, she suspected Wyatt wouldn’t
be far behind. Which was why she’d
altered her route, going in random
directions. Trying to lose the man.
Unfortunately, it hadn’t worked.
Casting a glower at him, Remy
extricated the shirt and a small blanket
from her bag and crawled back to
Dantès. He was no longer lying on his
side but was half upright and panting
with interest at all the activity. That had
to be a good sign. She poured a small
dish of water for him and he drank
noisily and sloppily, splashing all over
as he was wont to do. Then she fed him
a few pieces of cheese and some dried
meat she’d gotten from Vonnie, the lady
who cooked at Yellow Mountain.
Just then Wyatt sucked in his breath
in an audible, delighted sound. She
turned to see him pulling out a plastic
tub from one of the cupboards.
“Oh, baby—airtight and clean as a
whistle even fifty years later,” he
murmured like a man to his lover.
She couldn’t help it, she had to
investigate, even though it meant
acknowledging his existence again.
“What’s in it?”
He had pulled off the top and was
taking things out. “Hot
damn
. A first aid
kit. Matches. A screwdriver set. Some
emergency glow sticks, even. And
duct
tape!
” He rustled through several other
items, pulling out a blanket four times
larger than the one she had, a pair of
scissors, and some other things Remy
didn’t see.
She didn’t wait for an invitation but
took the first aid kit and dug through it.
“Antibacterial ointment,” she read,
aiming her flashlight onto a small tube in
order to see. “Hmm.” It sounded
important, but it was awfully old. And
she wasn’t sure what it was.
“Can’t hurt to try it,” Wyatt said,
holding a ring of silvery tape in his hand.
“It’s been locked up airtight. Put it on the
deepest cuts and then bandage them up.”