THE
WMEGA JANE
Text ?003 Roger E. Moore
(roger70129@aol.com)
Daria and associated
characters are ?003 MTV Networks
Feedback (good, bad, indifferent,
just want to bother me, whatever) is appreciated. Please write to:
roger70129@aol.com
Synopsis: After a lethal pandemic
kills almost everyone alive, Jane Lane inherits the earth梑ut only from dawn to
dusk. Ghouls by the billions arise after sunset, and Daria Morgendorffer is one
of them. A horror tale inspired by Richard Matheson抯 classic novel of paranoia
and vampirism, I Am Legend (later filmed as The Omega Man).
Author抯 Notes: While chatting with Galen 揕awndale Stalker?Hardesty about angst fanfic in a topic on the Creative Writing forum of PPMB, I was reminded of a Daria plot idea I had once said I would never write. The plot quickly soaked up a few 搉ever done before in Daria fanfic?ideas that were mentioned in yet another PPMB topic. Carried away by the moment, I wrote the story. It is derived from notes I made on the last chapter of a tale I began well over a year ago but never finished: 揃ipolar II.?Several other stories have been developed from the remains of 揃ipolar II,?including 揂pril Is the Cruelest Month.?The seeds of the original work were planted by two talented Daria fanfic writers, Renfield and Galen Hardesty, in an exchange of PPMB messages concerning Daria Morgendorffer抯 future. From that, the idea came to me for 揃ipolar II,?about possible futures of Daria and Jane Lane, then this related story, the limitations of which are my own fault and no one else抯. Further commentary and encouragement from Renfield, NomadX, Galen, and THM greatly added to the original story抯 development梐nd indirectly to this one梥o my gratitude goes out to them all.
牋牋牋牋牋?This tale was inspired by Richard Matheson抯 classic horror novel, I Am Legend. The quotation from Edna St. Vincent Millay in Chapter One is from, 揇irge Without Music.?The Millay quote in Chapter Five is from, 揥hat Lips My Lips Have Kissed.?Other quotations are identified where they occur. Shirley Jackson抯 novel, The Haunting, was originally published as The Haunting of Hill House. And, yes, the ghoul with the green hair is the notorious Daria fan, Tananda, per her request.
牋牋牋牋牋?This story is rated R. It contains strong graphic elements of horror, including violent and shocking scenes, and it is not recommended for anyone with a weak stomach. Halloween or any dark night would be the best time to read it.
Acknowledgments: The story makes extensive
use of maps of the Morgendorffer home in Lawndale (and notes in an accompanying
explanatory article, 揗y Take on the Morgendorffers?Residence?, created by
noted fanfic writer Steven Galloway and found on the Internet, among other
excellent places, at:
http://www.glitterberries.com/morgendorffer_home_layout.html
牋牋牋牋牋?The beta-readers who deserve
applause for turning my attempts at writing into something worth reading are:
Thea Zara, Crusading Saint, Ranger Thorne, Galen 揕awndale Stalker?Hardesty,
Brandon League, angelinhel, Greystar, Steven Galloway, and Nick 揜anchoth?Gaston. Thank you, all!
牋牋牋牋牋?And, please enjoy the story.
Ah, awful weight! Infinity
Pressed down upon the finite
Me!
My anguished spirit, like a
bird,
Beating against my lips I
heard;
Yet lay the weight so close
about
There was no room for it
without.
And so beneath the weight
lay I
And suffered death, but
could not die.
桬dna St. Vincent Millay, 揜enascence?o:p>
Chapter One
And when he had opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of the fourth beast say, Come and see. And I looked, and behold a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him.
桼evelation 6:7-8
牋牋牋牋牋?Death had not improved Daria Morgendorffer抯 complexion in the eight months since she had died. Her eating habits since then hadn抰 helped, either.
牋牋牋牋牋?On the other hand, Jane Lane thought, looking over the body, Daria never did care much about her complexion or her eating habits. We change so little.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane crouched on the garage floor beside the emaciated body of the girl who had been her best and only friend in life. She balanced on the heels of her hiking boots. An Italian-made semiautomatic shotgun rested across her knees. She took a long drag on her cigarette, filling her lungs with poison and nicotine, then took the cigarette in her gloved fingers and exhaled the smoke through her nose. Brushing her long black bangs from her blue eyes, she scratched her head with her right thumb. Sweat ran down her forehead. It was overly warm inside the Morgendorffer house, but not intolerable.
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria抯 clothes looked worse every time Jane found her. A pity she didn抰 like using aprons. Her green jacket was so filthy it was almost the same color as her filthy black skirt. Her yellow T-shirt was permanently stained brown in four different shades. All this in just seven days. Jane checked Daria抯 feet. Her Doc Martens were similarly smeared but had otherwise held up well. No need to replace those for months, yet.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane put the cigarette in her mouth, wiped the sweat from her eyes, and pulled a high-intensity penlight from a pocket of her black-and-gray, urban-camouflage hunting jacket. She ran the bright beam over her friend抯 face. Daria抯 skin had its usual waxy, yellow-gray tint. No new abrasions or scratches marred her sallow looks. Her long hair was a thick, brown mat of dust, dirt, and spider webs, tangled to hell and gone in the week since Jane had last cleaned her up. Blank brown eyes were barely visible through her round, badly smudged lenses. How Daria had managed to retain her glasses in an undamaged state for this long was beyond Jane抯 ability to imagine梑ut, she admitted, that was just like Daria.
牋牋牋牋牋?The glasses are you. Jane had said this to her friend several years ago, when Daria toyed with the idea of getting contacts. They抮e symbolic of the whole Daria thing: I wear glasses, and I抦 not going to apologize for it.
牋牋牋牋牋?She remembered the moment as she looked down at Daria抯 corpse. The glasses thing had been so funny once.
牋牋牋牋牋?She laid the penlight on Daria抯 stomach and carefully removed her friend抯 glasses. After examining them closely, she folded them and put them in a breast pocket of her hunting jacket. She took a closer look at Daria抯 open eyes with the light, then gently closed the lids with her fingertips. Prying Daria抯 mouth open with a leather-gloved hand, she noted the yellowed, recessed gums and gray teeth. Daria did not brush or floss after every meal, that much was clear. Jane used to wonder if Daria knew who her meals were, or who they had been, but the issue no longer interested her. She brushed a bit of meat from her dead friend抯 gray lips. Cleaning up the red-brown streaks that ran down to her chin could wait a little longer.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane sighed, blowing smoke from the side of her mouth through her uncut hair. She was nineteen years old and literally owned the world. She was fairly sure she was the only living human within many hundreds of miles, if not the last one on the big blue marble itself. The battery-powered radios picked up only static on every band.
牋牋牋牋牋?Given that, Jane knew she could do pretty much anything she wanted. The nicotine kept her mind alert more effectively than caffeine did, and smoking kept her busy, gave her something to do when nothing was left in the timeless future but her own death. Given the current state of human affairs, lung cancer had no downside. Plus, smoking prevented her from smelling certain odors, like Daria抯 breath.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane stood up and stretched, holding the shotgun in a relaxed pose. Two lightweight, broad-beam flashlights were duct-taped to the sides of the barrel. She played the lights around the empty garage, curious as to what would have brought Daria out here. Daria抯 body lay as if she had sunk down while walking across the garage from the house. She would have crashed about three hours earlier, when the sun came up. After a moment, Jane spotted an open box on a large stack of cardboard boxes on the opposite wall, and she walked over to peer inside it. Paperbacks梐ll literature and poetry. Figured. Why were they out here instead of in Daria抯 room? Jane then remembered that these were the boxes Daria had planned to take to Raft College last fall, before the killer flu came.
牋牋牋牋牋?Raising her left hand, she peered at the illuminated dial of her gold Rolex, taken from a glass case in a downtown jewelry store. It was 9:46 a.m. on Tuesday, April 24th, eight months after Daria抯 move to Boston was delayed forever. Jane had planned to move there a few months later, to attend second-semester classes at a fine-arts college. It would have been nice to see Boston in the spring together.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane sighed. About ten and a half hours remained until sundown. She finished her cigarette and dropped it on the garage floor, stamping it out with her boot. Snapping off the gun lights, she slung the shotgun across her back and bent down, taking hold of Daria抯 wrists. With great effort and care, she dragged Daria back into the dark house to the laundry room, where she laid her friend抯 body on the linoleum floor by the washer and dryer. Jane turned on a battery-powered lantern on top of the dryer to give her light. The electricity, gas, and water utilities had shut down months ago, but she still got along.
牋牋牋牋牋?Stripping off her leather gloves, Jane strode back through the smothering air in the house to the front foyer, where she抎 left the Army-surplus duffle bag she had brought into the Morgendorffers?house a few minutes earlier. The two machine pistols dangling from her belt banged into her loose black-leather pants. The guns would get in the way soon, so Jane unhooked them from their short bungee cords and set them by the door. She undid the duffle bag抯 latch and emptied out the bag抯 contents. Kneeling, she sorted out a small stack of folded sheets, household disinfectant sprays, and several packs of batteries. Setting those aside, she found the new green jacket, black skirt, yellow T-shirt, and other Daria-sized clothes from the remaining items she had picked up on her last shopping spree through the Cranberry Commons mall in downtown Lawndale.
牋牋牋牋牋?She carried one of the folded sheets and a disinfectant spray over to Daria抯 body, then stepped back to take a breath. She felt the need for another cigarette, but it could wait. Pulling a small bottle of antibacterial soap from a pocket of her hunting jacket, she washed her hands with it, then pulled on a pair of latex gloves taken from a nurses?station at the abandoned Cedars of Lawndale Hospital. Bending down, she unfolded the sheet, moved Daria抯 body on top of it, then set to work tugging off Daria抯 ruined clothing. She finished in five minutes and threw the rags in a pile by the washer. The boots she sat on top of the washing machine. The socks went with the clothes.
牋牋牋牋牋?This done, Jane inspected Daria抯 naked corpse for damage. Daria was barely over five feet to begin with and bone-thin at present, and she didn抰 weight more than eighty pounds. Still, she was clearly getting around after dark with no trouble. Her fingers, knuckles, and knees were scraped, dirty, and scratched, but the rest of her was passable, if soiled梟o deep cuts, no broken bones, no missing parts. Her physical decay had been arrested with her death. Her skin didn抰 bruise, either, which was a plus. Jane suspected that Daria felt little or no pain in her current state, but this begged a difficult question: if Daria抯 nervous system wasn抰 functioning as before, how was it possible for her to read? Further, how could she move without respiration or the circulation of blood? Did her undead metabolism not require oxygen, or did it take oxygen from what she consumed? How could she eat such vast quantities of dead flesh, yet remain so small? A thousand more questions begged for attention. Jane easily shrugged them off. She took the world for what it was now and didn抰 question its quirks, unless they affected her bottom line of survival.
牋牋牋牋牋?And keeping Daria around. There was always that, too.
牋牋牋牋牋?Even with her sinuses full of smoke, Jane could tell that Daria reeked to high heaven. Wrinkling her nose, Jane walked back to the front door and picked up two one-gallon plastic jugs of distilled water, taking them back to the utility room. She took several towels, washcloths, a bottle of liquid soap, a hairbrush, and a bucket from a nearby bathroom, where Jane had weeks ago stockpiled them for just this purpose. Kneeling by Daria抯 side, she made up a soapy mixture in the bucket, wet a washcloth in it, and began working on Daria抯 left hand and arm. By the time she got to Daria抯 upper arm, she was singing a Tracy Chapman song she remembered from her childhood in the late 1980s. It helped pass the time. Daria抯 hair was always the hardest part, but with her head on a folded towel and a plastic tray for the washing and rinse water, it worked out.
牋牋牋牋牋?Forty minutes later, Daria was as clean as Jane could get her. The sheet and washcloths were ruined, but the stores had plenty left. It took Jane long minutes more to brush all the debris and tangles from her friend抯 wet hair and dry her off. That done, she knelt, got her arms under Daria抯 shoulders and thighs梒areful not to let the cool dead skin touch her face梐nd lifted the body. She raised a knee and braced herself, then carefully stood up with Daria cradled close to her chest. Daria felt strangely small, as if Jane held the body of a sleeping child in her arms. Jane tried not to think of her sister抯 children, the little nieces and nephews that she had once diapered and put to bed just like this, what dreadful fate had been theirs when the plague came梐nd in the horrors after.
牋牋牋牋牋?Mindful of doorframes and cabinets, she carried Daria from the laundry room into the kitchen and then to the living room, where she lowered the body and laid it on a long sofa. It was the same sofa from which Daria and Jane had watched the Morgendorffers?big-screen television together, in a time so far in the past it seemed more dream than real. Jane then got the new clothes she抎 picked up and brought them into the living room. Getting Daria dressed was time consuming and frustrating, as usual, as her limbs were not cooperative. The Doc Martens had to be rinsed and wiped off as well. Still, Jane was satisfied with the result when it was over. She hoped Daria would appreciate having clean underwear again. As if it mattered.
牋牋牋牋牋?She straightened Daria抯 legs and adjusted her posture, positioned her hands over her stomach, and put a soft pillow under her head. A towel went under her shoes to keep the couch dry. As a finishing touch, Jane cleaned Daria抯 glasses with a cotton handkerchief from another of her many pockets, then put them back on her friend and straightened them, making sure they were high on her nose. She stepped back and inspected her work. Daria was good for another week.
牋牋牋牋牋?I
should clean her up more often, she thought. The stores have enough
clothing to last her for years, and she doesn抰 really have to wear the same outfit.
I come by every day to check on her, but she gets so . . . foul, so awful
looking so quickly, why not make the makeover twice a week?
牋牋牋牋牋?Because
cleaning her up is such a chore. I have so much else to do, too. Plus, she抯
dead.
牋牋牋牋牋?But
she抯 walking around at night, doing stuff. She can抰 really be dead.
牋牋牋牋牋?She
doesn抰 breathe or have a heartbeat. What do you call that?
牋牋牋牋牋?But
she reads, she keeps house, she acts like she抯 alive.
牋牋牋牋牋?Yes梑ut
you know what she eats, right? You bring her meals, after all.
牋牋牋牋牋?I know,
but it抯 Daria. She was . . . she抯 still my best friend. I care about her.
牋牋牋牋牋?Do you
honestly care about her, or is it something else that makes you come back to
her every day?
牋牋牋牋牋?I
don抰 know what you mean. It抯 Daria, damn it. What else am I supposed to do?
牋牋牋牋牋?Why
don抰 you come over one night after dark and knock on her door for a visit?
牋牋牋牋牋?Because
she抯 dead, and she might turn on me and try to kill me, just like?i>
牋牋牋牋牋?揟ime to stop thinking,?Jane said aloud. She emptied the wastewater down the kitchen sink and put away the things she could use for Daria抯 next bath. The sheet, latex gloves, washcloths, and Daria抯 old clothes were rolled into a wad that she left by the front door. She searched the house next, making sure the roof wasn抰 leaking, the many flashlights she抎 left for Daria were working and had extra batteries, and all the boards she抎 nailed over the first-floor windows were intact.
牋牋牋牋牋?The upstairs check went quickly. Nothing was disturbed. She peeked out of an unboarded second-floor window in Daria抯 bedroom and looked down into the backyard. The garbage-bag pile below the window was steadily expanding. The left edge had reached the open patio. Several bags had burst, spilling leg bones and skulls on the overgrown lawn. Hot pepper oil kept animals out of it, not that animals liked the taste of the new dead all that much, and the insecticides were still working. Jane knew she抎 soon have to clean up the mess to keep the rats away, but she put off thinking about it. She could handle the stench until tomorrow. At least Daria was eating well.
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria obviously didn抰 care about her own appearance, but she kept the house relatively clean梕ven the kitchen, which must have been difficult, considering. Jane remembered with perfect clarity the day late last August when she realized Daria might be getting up and walking around at night like all the other human corpses in existence were getting up and walking around. The corpses stopped walking after Jane shot them through the head with one of the weapons from her swiftly expanding arsenal. Gathering her courage and armed to the teeth, she had explored the Morgendorffer house at high noon on a stifling hot day. Daria sat on the living room sofa, dead梬ith a book in her lap and a flashlight at her side. She was not lying on her upstairs bed, where Jane had left her only friend after the nameless, flu-like plague had killed her.
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria抯 dead parents and sister, whom Jane had also put in their own beds, were missing. Their bloodstained mattresses had been stripped. By the kitchen sink were several long knives, a hand axe, and a garbage can with a large plastic liner. Draped over the lip of the garbage can was a scalp to which a yard-long hank of red hair clung. The hair was the same color as the long hair that once graced the head of Daria抯 younger sister, Quinn.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane did not find the nerve to go into the kitchen again until February. When she did, she was careful to keep her head down and her gaze fixed on the floor, with a hand by her eyes to shield her vision.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane walked back into the living room, her search completed. It was almost noon. The need for another smoke preyed on her mind, and she felt for the cigarette pack in a pocket on her left jacket sleeve. She took one out and lit up with a red butane lighter from another pocket. She then set the new packs of batteries on the counter in the kitchen, where most of the spare flashlights and camping lanterns sat. After making sure Daria had enough plastic garbage bags to carry off the parts she didn抰 eat, Jane went back to the garage and hauled in the open box of books Daria had likely been seeking. She put the box on the coffee table at Daria抯 side, a present for when she arose at sundown. One of the books was a collection of poems by Edna St. Vincent Millay. Jane picked it up and riffled the pages, stopping at random to read.
牋牋牋牋牋?I am not resigned to the shutting away of loving hearts in the hard ground.
牋牋牋牋牋?So it is, and so it will be, for so it has been, time out of mind:
牋牋牋牋牋?Into the darkness they go, the wise and the lovely. Crowned
牋牋牋牋牋?With lilies and with laurel they go; but I am not resigned.
牋牋牋牋牋?She shut the book and left it on top of the box, wishing she had not read that particular poem. She blew a jet of smoke across the living room. Since Daria didn抰 breathe, she couldn抰 smell the cigarettes. It was the perfect arrangement.
牋牋牋牋牋?Time to get her dinner, Jane thought. I hope she likes take-out.
Chapter Two
No live organism can continue for long to exist sanely under conditions of absolute reality; even larks and katydids are supposed, by some, to dream.
桽hirley Jackson, The Haunting
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane pulled on her black leather gloves, loaded up her duffle bag, and unslung her shotgun. She checked the six-round magazine, made sure a round was chambered, then reattached her machine pistols to their bungee cords and clicked the safeties off. A check followed of her long hunting knife and spare ammo clips. She wished she had something to replace the lucky necklace that Trent had given her for her sixth birthday, but she had buried it with him. It had proven not so lucky after all. She picked up a black motorcycle helmet but didn抰 strap it on; it interfered with her hearing and was too confining in general, so it went into the open duffle bag until there was an emergency.
牋牋牋牋牋牋牋?She took a last walk through
the dark first floor, peeking out several windows between the heavy boards she
had nailed over them on the inside and outside. A couple of dogs looked on from
across the street from the front of the house. They抎 smelled her梠r, more
likely, her cigarettes梐nd were curious. Jane put in a pair of earplugs, then
unlocked the front door and eased it open. The blinding sunlight made her
squint. A fresh scent of grassy fields washed away the stale, foul odors in the
house. The dogs watched Jane with interest, their ears up. Jane stepped
outside, pulling the door shut behind her, and raised the shotgun. She aimed
the barrel over the dogs?heads, gritted her teeth, and squeezed the trigger.
牋牋牋牋牋?The blast rang in her ears even
through the earplugs. The two dogs jumped and fled as the gunshot echoed back
and forth from the neighboring houses. Birds flew off in every direction. The
way was clear.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane sighed with relief and took out
the earplugs. She hated to kill a living thing, even a starving animal that
might later try to tear out her throat. Shooting the dead, though, was what she
did every single day.
牋牋牋牋牋?She flung the wad of soiled laundry
into the back of the large red pickup truck parked right outside the door, then
hauled the duffle bag out and tossed it on the floor of the cab, on the
passenger side. The duffle bag covered up a cardboard box of canned soups from
the local Food Lord, assorted water bottles, a first-aid kit she took from the
back of an ambulance, and a dozen CD cases for the truck抯 stereo system. She
shut and locked the door to Daria抯 house, got into the driver抯 seat of the
pickup, buckled up, and drove off at 12:21 p.m. It was a beautiful spring day,
with a light breeze stirring the tall grass and weeds up and down every uncut
yard on Glen Oaks Lane. Dandelions rose from cracks in the sidewalks and
streets. Several houses had bird nests in their gutters or windowsills.
Lawndale was slipping back from civilization, moment by moment. Jane imagined
that a thousand years after she died, Lawndale would be prairie or forest
again.
牋牋牋牋牋?Will Daria still walk the earth?
Will she be the last of us all, the queen of the damned?
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane crushed out her cigarette and
headed west down Glen Oaks, flipping the visors down to keep the noon sun out of
her eyes. She drove slowly, avoiding small piles of human bones in the road as
she searched for anything unusual. At the intersection of Glen Oaks and King
Stephen Street, she was turning right at the stop sign when she spotted one of
the new dead at the end of a driveway.
牋牋牋牋牋?She turned the truck around and
backed up into the driveway, stopping fifteen feet short of the body. Turning
off the ignition, she rolled the window down two inches and listened. Only the
wind in the trees could be heard. She put in her earplugs, then got the biker
helmet from the duffle bag and strapped it on. Shotgun in hand and machine
pistols on her belt, she slowly opened the cab door. Jane did not trust the new
dead, even in the daytime. She remembered Trent.
牋牋牋牋牋?The naked body was that of an adult
white male, powerful in appearance despite the physically wasted look all the
new dead had. Jane suspected that the new dead were stronger than they seemed.
She didn抰 recognize the body, but it wouldn抰 have mattered. Judging from the scars
and bite marks on his arms and legs, he抎 fought off many attacks by other
walking dead. His bulging stomach hinted that he抎 finished eating one of his
attackers the night before. He looked strong enough to tear off the boards
covering the windows of Daria抯 home. That was too bad for him.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane made sure the shotgun抯 safety
was off. She walked around the body once, then took a stance fifteen feet away
and raised her weapon. She aimed at the head, lying on its side in the tall
grass. She did not shut her eyes when she pulled the trigger. She had to be
sure.
牋牋牋牋牋?The blast put a whine in her ears,
but the recoil was mild. The naked body was suddenly, messily headless. A
sickly mist hung in the air above the broad, gory splatter in the grass. Jane
lowered the shotgun and stepped back, trying not to inhale the hovering
particles of flesh. You抮e a dead-dead, now, she thought at the corpse.
She kicked aside the spent shotgun shell on the driveway and took off her
helmet, then took out her earplugs. Double-dead, permanently dead,
dead-dead. Better you than me梠r Daria.
牋牋牋牋牋?Slinging the shotgun, Jane lowered
the tailgate of the truck and pulled out a ramp, setting the end on the
driveway. Climbing the ramp, she picked up a large hand trolley in the truck抯
cargo bed, then came down the ramp, hooked the front edge of the hand trolley
under the midsection of the headless body, and hauled it into the rear of the
truck. She dumped it beside the spare gasoline cans and oversized toolkit at
the front of the bed. The routine ended with putting away the trolley and ramp
and closing the tailgate. Take-out order number one for Daria, she
thought, tossing her helmet to the floor of the passenger side. Do you want
fries with that? She wiped her feet before she got back into the cab.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane figured each body lasted Daria
about two days. How Daria could eat so much was beyond her, but that was how it
went. Jane avoided leaving more than three dead-deads at the house, as they
stank up the place too much when she visited later. The dead-deads decayed
slowly, but their odor after a week could not be stomached. As far as Jane
knew, scavenging local animals, even insects, were reluctant to eat one of the
dead-deads梑ut another of the ravenous new dead, like the ghouls of legend,
would do it in an instant. Cannibalism was clearly their thing.
牋牋牋牋牋?The south end of King Stephen Street
was clear. Jane turned left onto Howard Drive and headed in the direction of
her old home, near the end on the right. She stopped twice, shooting and
loading two more bodies, both adult males. Once long ago, she wondered why she
saw so few females around, and no children at all. The horribly obvious answer
came to her before long.
牋牋牋牋牋?When she finished loading the third
body, it was after 1:30 p.m. She was tired by that time, but there were seven
hours to go until sundown. She still had to clear out the subdivision as she
had done every day since last fall. It was unlikely she抎 put a major dent in
Lawndale抯 new-dead population. She had many thousands left to kill, according
to the last census, even if children were not counted. Strangely, it was
getting harder to find the new dead of late. She knew she hadn抰 destroyed that
many of them. Were they eating each other faster than she抎 previously guessed?
What was up? She didn抰 know. Maybe they were leaving town. She could only
hope.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane eased on the brake and put the
truck in neutral when she reached the pale yellow two-story house at 111 Howard
Drive. For a moment, she put her arms on the top of the steering wheel and rested
her head on them, looking out the passenger window at the home where she had
grown up. Her parents had been somewhere in Europe when the murderous flu hit
in mid-August. Her oldest sister had gone to Florida in search of her four
children, who had run off again. Her oldest brother was a few hours away in
Oakwood, fighting with his wife, and her middle sister had been somewhere in
Central America. Jane had not heard from any of them since.
牋牋牋牋牋?Trent, however, had lived at home
with her. He got sick right at the start. She was with her twenty-four-year-old
brother when he died, shivering in bed with a fever of over 109. She covered
his forehead with ice cubes wrapped in a dishtowel, bathed his chest and arms
with a wet cloth, and fed him liquid medication with an eyedropper. In the late
afternoon of the second day of his illness, he inhaled deeply, gave a long
sigh, and breathed no more. Jane tried mouth-to-mouth, she screamed to God for
help, she did everything she could to bring him back, but he was gone. She
covered him up and wept. Outside, fire and ambulance sirens cried in the air
over Lawndale. Cars raced down Howard Drive as families fled the city or took
loved ones to the overflowing medical centers. Jane was deaf and blind to it
all.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane sat in her red pickup truck and
remembered digging the hole for Trent in the backyard with a shovel she got
from the gardening shed of a dead neighbor. She did not want her brother to be
away from her, even in death. Jane dug the hole as deep as she could and laid him
in it, wrapped in sheets she took from his bed. She cried over him, prayed for
him, put his favorite guitar and his songwriting notebook in with him, and
buried him. Afterward, she lay in the grass by his grave until the sun came up
the next day. She then went to Daria抯, several blocks away. Everyone there was
sick, too. One day later, she laid Daria and her family to rest and went back
to her home.
牋牋牋牋牋?Two nights after that, Jane
aimlessly drove Trent抯 car through a deserted Lawndale in the twilight, wondering
why she of all people was still alive. Someone attacked her vehicle at an
intersection. He wore rags and looked to be both terribly ill and insane. Jane
quickly drove off, but she began encountering more people, all of them crazed,
wandering the streets and attacking anything that moved or made noise. They all
made for her car. She got back into her house after running over two attackers
by accident, and she locked herself in her room and jammed furniture against
the door when the dead came through the windows. They smashed everything while
fighting each other and searching for her. Most of them left by dawn; the rest
left on the following night.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane had watched the neighborhood
from her second-floor windows and discovered the cyclic nature of the plague
victims?attacks: day, stop; night, go. She finally left her house two days
later, half-starved, and drove a stolen car into the security gate of a gun
shop after looting a Food Lord grocery. Her arsenal grew rapidly after that.
牋牋牋牋牋?One week to the night after she buried Trent, Jane sat alone in the kitchen of her home. She had boarded over the windows of her home and mounted removable bars across the doors. The power was still on at the time. While carving random patterns on the kitchen table with a pocketknife, she heard someone outside at the back door. She turned on the back light and looked out the window?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane still blamed herself for not
burying Trent deeply enough. She shot him until she was out of ammunition and
not even she could recognize what was left of his body. At dawn, she burned
Trent抯 remains, left her parents?home, and never went in it again.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane shook herself. 揙kay, time to
stop thinking again,?she said aloud. She put the truck in gear and drove off
through the neighborhood. Maybe shooting a few dozen new dead would help her
forget the past. It had never worked before, though.
牋牋牋牋牋?Three hours later, Jane arrived back
at the Morgendorffers?home. She抎 eaten lunch from a soup can, had her
afternoon bathroom break, listened to two alternative-rock CDs, and was into
her second pack of cigarettes. In the back of the pickup truck were the first
three dead-deads she had found in the subdivision. Jane made a note to put more
boxes of shotgun ammo in the truck before she went out next, to replace the
twelve shells used on corpses that day. The previous year, she抎 thrown the
dead-deads into a nearby quarry and set them afire, but when winter came she
got tired of that. Gasoline and lighter fluid were too valuable. It was easier
to shoot the dead and leave them where they were, even if it drew more ghouls.
She just shot the new ones that came by.
牋牋牋牋牋?However, her recent body counts were
down by two-thirds from the old days. Something was definitely happening, but
she didn抰 know what. She pushed the issue aside. It was time to stock Daria抯
kitchen.
牋牋牋牋牋?After ensuring that no dogs were
about, she backed the truck up to Daria抯 door, got out, dropped the tailgate,
and began unloading. Counting rest breaks, it took a half-hour to toss out the
dead-deads, drag them on blankets through the house so as not to stain the
carpet, and stack them in the kitchen nook by the boarded-over, cemented-over
sliding doors. They would last Daria for a week. Several months ago, Jane had
the idea of putting a sprig of parsley on top of each body, and she had laughed
in wild hysteria until she slapped her face repeatedly and cried.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane checked the house again, but
nothing had changed. She stamped out her cigarette in the laundry room and
kicked the butt into the garage. Daria lay on the couch as if napping. Jane sat
on the edge of the sofa beside her, weary to the bone, and took off her left
glove. She ran her fingers through Daria抯 auburn hair and stroked the cool,
yellow skin of her sunken cheek.
牋牋牋牋牋?What a hell of a world, Jane
thought. I have no one left to touch and hold but a dead person. I feel like
I抦 a monster, too, Daria. I抦 sick to even think about it, but I love it when
I hold you after your bath. I抦 not gay, and I know for sure I抦 not into doing
it with the dead, but all I have left to touch in the world is you. No one else
is left. I抦 coming apart a little each day, losing my grip on sanity. Seeing
you is all that keeps me from turning a gun on myself and calling it quits. I
killed Trent. Can you believe that? I killed my own brother, the only one in
the family who ever looked out for me. I抳e killed hundreds of the dead all
over this town, but one of them was Trent. I抦 sick to death of me, sick of
what I抳e done, sick of living when everyone else is a corpse, sick of this
damned planet full of ghouls. I抦 nineteen, and my best friend is a brainy
ghoul who reads poetry and eats the dead that I kill. I want to die, but I
don抰 dare, knowing that I might become like you, or something worse than you.
I have to live because you抮e still moving, Daria. You抮e all that I have left.
You抮e all that I have.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane reached the end of her thoughts
and realized she had been speaking aloud. She rarely did that around Daria.
Perhaps she really was starting to go crazy. That would be great if it were
true, she thought. Being sane is no fun at all.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane held Daria抯 face cupped in her
hand, then released it and sat looking at the floor for a time. Finally, she
checked her watch, unzipped her hunting jacket, and pulled a thick envelope
from an inner pocket. She gently laid it on Daria抯 stomach under her cool
hands. Jane抯 handwritten diary for the past week would give Daria something to
read that night, and she might find Jane抯 latest sketches of interest. Jane
knew the value of keeping busy in an empty world, and Daria likely did, too.
She had no clue where Daria stored these messages, or if she read or kept them
at all, but Jane kept writing because it gave her something to do.
牋牋牋牋牋??/span>揔now what I should do??she said to Daria, holding one of her hands. 揑 should get a tape recorder. I can抰 believe I never thought of that before. There抯 an electronics store at Cranberry Commons. I抣l head over there and get a couple of tape recorders, before sundown, and I抣l make tapes for you to go with my diary stuff. That抯 kind of artsy, don抰 you think? I should do that.?Jane shook her head. 揥hat I really should do, of course, is just stay here until you wake up and let you kill me, because I抦 . . . I抦 just so . . . okay, I抦 sorry, I shouldn抰 have said that. Forget it. I抦 going to get those tape recorders. If I find any new CDs for you to play in that boom box, I抣l get those, too. I hate tearing them out of those damned plastic holder things, but what the hell.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane looked at the floor again. 揇o you remember what you once told Mrs. Bennett in Economics about malls? You called them the ultimate repositories for human greed and debasement. That was so funny. God, that seems like so long ago. I can抰 even believe that was us doing all that, you know, everything we did. It seems like it was someone else.?She sighed. 揑 should get you some Fuzzy Wuzzy Wee-Bits. I bet that would be just the thing to perk this place up. A little Wee-Bit zombie or something. No offense. A couple of fans would help, too. Hey, I was going to ask you, what did you do with all those doo-dads you won at the Mall of the Millennium in tenth grade? I kept forgetting to ask, and now it抯 too . . . anyway, maybe I can find more of them for you. What the heck.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane patted Daria抯 thin hands.
揋otta go. Stay cool. Sorry, bad pun. See you tomorrow.?She stood up, pulled
her glove back on, and headed for the front door. She抎 have to step on it to
get to the mall and find what she needed in the three hours left until sundown.
Then came the drive back to Lawndale High School, her old alma mater, where she
had barricaded the first floor of one of the secondary buildings. A large
storeroom on the second floor at night was her new home. The school was Jane抯
ultimate survival shelter. She had everything there, everything but a really
good reason to live.
牋牋牋牋牋?揃ye!?she called before she shut
and locked the front door. She knew Daria could easily unlock the deadbolt (deadbolt,
what a funny word, she thought), but Jane had taped handwritten warnings to
the door not to do that, because of the other undead running around hungry at
night. Daria had obeyed that injunction, except for one day last October when
Jane found her friend facedown in the front yard. Jane realized later Daria was
probably looking for something to eat. She dragged Daria inside and left a
blistering note with her, ordering her to never leave the house again or else
Jane would never come back. And Jane left a body for her in the kitchen. Daria
stayed inside after that.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane unlimbered her shotgun and
scanned the street. No dogs or other threats. Several hawks circled in the sky
overhead. Perhaps they抎 found something dead. She took out another cigarette
and lit up, then took a look in the back of the truck before she got in and set
out for the mall.
牋牋牋牋牋?The wad of ruined clothes and other
items was still in the back. Jane groaned and swore. She抎 forgotten to throw
it out earlier. Retrieving the wad, she walked down to the street with it,
where she flung it into the front yard of the neighbor across the way. The wad
came undone, and everything inside flew out. Jane was turning away when
something odd caught her eye in the debris. She hesitated, then walked across
the street and looked through the mess.
牋牋牋牋牋?A piece of paper had fallen out of a
pocket in Daria抯 black skirt. Jane bumped it with her toe, then knelt down and
picked it up. It was an index card, stained like the rest of the things Daria
had on. It was folded in quarters. She unfolded it.
牋牋牋牋牋?On the index card were five words,
carefully printed in pencil in capital letters.
牋牋牋牋牋?JANE,
牋牋牋牋牋?PLEASE KILL ME.
牋牋牋牋牋?DARIA
Chapter Three
Two are better than one; because they have a good reward for their labor. For if they fall, the one will lift up his fellow: but woe to him that is alone when he falleth; for he hath not another to help him up.
桬cclesiastes 4:9-10
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane blinked and read the note
again, as if doing so would magically clarify the message. She forgot
everything else she was going to do that afternoon. She turned around and
looked at the boarded-up Morgendorffer house, then looked down and read the
note several more times. After a few minutes, she walked back to the truck and
leaned against the driver抯 door, staring at the paper for the longest time.
牋牋牋牋牋?She finally roused herself from her
stupor and dully checked the time. She had only two and three-quarter hours
till sundown. Tucking the paper into an outer pocket of her hunting jacket, she
got into her truck and drove away, barely conscious of what she was doing and with
no idea of where she was going.
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria Morgendorffer wanted to die?
And Daria wanted her best and only friend Jane to kill her?
牋牋牋牋牋?Her mind elsewhere, Jane drove to
the high school, circled it, then picked up Stewart George Avenue and headed
for the local mall. She slammed on the brakes once when a border collie ran
across the road in front of her.
牋牋牋牋牋?I almost killed a dog yesterday,
Daria said to me a million years ago. She was lying on the bed in my room. Her
mother had taken her out driving, and she抎 almost whacked a stupid bulldog.
Gonna work your way up to humans slowly? I asked her, being silly. Boy, isn抰
that a riot梙ere I am, working my way down from killing humans,
including my own brother. God, I am so funny sometimes. I抦 a riot.
牋牋牋牋牋?The mall came into view through the trees at the end of the avenue. 揥hy am I even going here??Jane said aloud. 揥hat am I doing here? What抯 the point of it all? I was coming here to get Daria a present, and what the hell am I going to do now? I have nothing to live for as it is! The whole freaking world抯 dead, and I抦 going shopping for my dead friend! Why am I doing this? Am I crazy, or what??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane drove around to the main
entrance of the mall. The glass doors were smashed in, the deed done by Jane
many weeks ago when she backed into the entrance with a tour bus she found
sitting in the parking lot. She threw her cigarette out the window and slowed
as she drove through the doorway, glass crunching loudly under the tires.
Turning on the truck抯 headlights to high beams, she headed down the broad,
dimly lit aisle for the main concourse. Large rats scurried away from the
light. She slowed, looking for bodies, then turned right by a dry fountain in
the center of the intersection and moved on.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 don抰 even know what I抦 looking for now,?Jane said, barely aware she was talking to herself. 揑 should go back to Daria抯 and write her a note. No freaking way I抦 going to kill her! Why does she . . . what right does she have to . . . why did she have to go and say that? What抯 wrong with her? I抦 the one who goes out shooting things! She gets to stay home and read all day! What抯 the problem??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?She spotted the familiar Books by the Ton outlet store and parked beside it. She got out of the cab without her shotgun or helmet, machine pistols bumping against her thighs, and walked into the store. There, she grabbed books off the shelves in armloads and threw them in a heap in the cargo bed of the pickup. 揟here!?Jane yelled, going for another load. 揌ere are some books for you, Daria! History! Literature! Art! Science! Current Events! Politics! The whole freaking thing, everything! Now you have something to do, don抰 you? Right??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane threw three more loads into the
truck, then got back in the cab. She drove next to the electronics store,
looting it of tape recorders, ham radios, walkie-talkies, digital cameras, and
everything else she could find. It all went into the back of the truck.
Finally, she drove straight down the main concourse into the black halls of
Cashman抯, stopping well inside the entrance. She remembered this time to take
the shotgun. The truck抯 high-beam headlights were more than adequate for her
visual needs.
牋牋牋牋牋?She stalked into the women抯
department, ignoring the odor of decay that hovered in the air, then headed for
the racks of clothes in Daria抯 size. In the pants and blouses sections, she
gathered up heaps of clothing at random and flung them into the truck bed on
top of everything else. She moved quickly, in part because she knew she didn抰
have much time left and in part because she was so angry at the world. Her head
was full of Daria and dying and dead planets.
牋牋牋牋牋?When the cargo bed was nearly full
of stuff, she finally got back into the cab, shut the door, and inhaled deeply,
her eyes closed. She sank forward and put her head against the steering wheel,
her hands in her lap.
牋牋牋牋牋?揥hy do you want me to kill you, Daria??she said in a soft voice. 揑 don抰 want you to die. I know you aren抰 alive, but I can抰 go on without you. I can抰. I just can抰.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?She wiped her eyes and looked
around. To her right in the truck抯 headlights hung a sign that read: JUNIOR
FIVE.
牋牋牋牋牋?換uinn and the Fashion Club used to
shop there,?Jane said to herself. 揇aria could probably wear some of that.
She抯 thin enough now, even as much as she eats. What a metabolism.?After a
moment, she sniffed, got out of the truck, slung the shotgun on her back again,
and walked to the Junior Five department.
牋牋牋牋牋?The stench of rotting flesh was
stronger now, but it was an old smell. Jane coughed and choked back an urge to
vomit. She watched her feet, maneuvering through the aisles using the
headlights of the truck that were aimed in her direction. Stopping at a few
racks of dresses and pants, she pulled them off at random and took them back to
the truck. One more bunch, and then she抎 go to Daria抯, dump her stuff, and
write a note in response before she went back to the high school for the night.
She抎 show Daria that she was being cared for. She wouldn抰 let Daria do
anything stupid.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane made her way toward the back of
the department, where more tops and slacks were folded on shelves. She decided
it was time for Daria to dump the green-orange-black ensemble that she抎 clung
to for so long. Even the dead had to change with the times.
牋牋牋牋牋?The foul stink got worse. Jane
unslung the shotgun and turned on its twin barrel lights, swinging it around to
see if anything blocked her path. She got to the end of an aisle that formed a
揟?intersection at a wall with another aisle, swung the shotgun right and saw
nothing, then swung the weapon to the left.
牋牋牋牋牋?A human skeleton lay scattered in
pieces across the floor, surrounded by racks of size-two dresses for thin
teenagers. The dresses on one side were splattered with a dark brown substance
that had dried on them months ago.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane gasped in spite of herself.
Steadying her nerve, she stepped in for a closer look. Among the remains were a
black purse with a shoulder strap, a pair of stylish black shoes, and a blue
dress encrusted with dried blood, entangled with the skeleton抯 spinal column
and ribs. The remains were much disturbed. Ghouls梩he new dead in their
up-and-moving nocturnal form梙ad obviously found the body and consumed it long
ago.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane coughed and spit, feeling
queasy. The smell was getting to her. She wished she抎 lit up another smoke
before walking back here, even with the danger of a fire. Crouching, she pulled
the purse over by the strap and opened it. Inside was a blue wallet that
flipped open in her hands.
牋牋牋牋牋?An attractive Vietnamese teenager
with long black hair looked at her with a bland gaze from the color photo on a
driver抯 license. The name on the license was Tiffany Blum-Deckler. It was one
of Quinn Morgendorffer抯 friends from the Fashion Club at Lawndale High梐 slim,
harmless girl who was not very bright and completely obsessed with her
appearance and weight.
牋牋牋牋牋?揙h, no.?Jane felt a terrible
sadness sink into her. 揙h, baby, please say this isn抰 you.?She raised her
shotgun to illuminate the area around her.
牋牋牋牋牋?Under the rack of dresses was a
dark-stained skull lying on its side, enmeshed in long strands of black hair
that were cemented together by thick brown clots. The empty eye sockets looked
upward, peering at the bloodstained dresses above it through the veil of its
befouled hair. Through each temple of the skull was a large, broken hole. A few
feet from the skull was a small black .38-caliber handgun.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane looked down at the .38. 揙h,
Jesus, no,?she whispered, sick at heart. She guessed Tiffany had blown out her
brains here during the flu pandemic, her family and friends in the Fashion Club
already dead or dying.
牋牋牋牋牋?After a moment, Jane reached for the
gun with a gloved hand. Her fingers bumped against it, moving the weapon an
inch farther away.
牋牋牋牋牋?In the corner of her vision, she saw
the skull slowly roll over and look at her with its hollow eyes.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane shrieked and fell backward, not
even thinking to use the shotgun. She scrambled to her feet and ran.
牋牋牋牋牋?An instant later, she hit something,
or something hit her, square in the middle of her forehead with the force of a
hammer blow. Stars and galaxies exploded in her vision. She staggered backward
and fell. The world went out.
* * *
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane stood in the Junior Five
department of Cashman抯. All the ceiling lights were on, but it was silent all
around. Tiffany Blum-Deckler stood before her, with her back to Jane. Tiffany
wore a tight blue dress and was checking her appearance in a big mirror. Jane,
though she looked over Tiffany抯 right shoulder, could not see herself in the
mirror抯 reflection.
牋牋牋牋牋?Tiffany was doing something with her
hair. A huge hole had been blown through her head with a handgun, so that her
white skull could be seen around the edges. She was trying to arrange her silky
black hair to hide the damage.
牋牋牋牋牋?She turned around to face Jane with
a peaceful expression. 揇o you like what I did??she said in her California
drawl. 揑t抯 the latest fashion.?Her fingers curled around a thick lock of her
hair, and she pulled it aside. Jane could see inside Tiffany抯 head, which was
as hollow as her dead skull.
牋牋牋牋牋?Tiffany抯 eyes fell out inside her
head. Jane could see into her empty skull through the two black socket holes in
her face. 揑抣l always be beautiful,?she said, and she came toward Jane, her
finger twisting that lock of hair. 揑抣l never be sick. I抣l never be fat.?Her
jaw fell off, and the skin melted from her face and ran down over her tight
blue dress.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇aria,?said Tiffany. Her skull fell off the top of her spine, but the rest of her blood-coated skeleton advanced on Jane. 揇aria,?she said again with no mouth. 揧ou抮e late.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane screamed.
* * *
牋牋牋牋牋?Still screaming, Jane awoke in a
half-darkness lit by her fallen shotgun抯 lights and the distant pickup抯 high
beams. She lay on her back, head aching and thoughts spinning as she struggled
to get her bearings and get up. A large floor mirror stood before her. She had
run into the rounded edge of the mirror抯 shining metal frame. She rolled on
her side to get up on her elbow.
牋牋牋牋牋?She looked into Tiffany抯
hair-shrouded skull.
牋牋牋牋牋?Screaming again, Jane ran, not even
aware she was on her feet. She slammed into dress racks and shelving units,
fleeing for the brilliant, blinding headlights of her truck.
牋牋牋牋牋?A naked, two-legged male figure
stepped in front of the headlights. Jane stopped screaming and slid to a stop
only forty feet away. She could not see who it was through the glare, but she
knew.
牋牋牋牋牋?The two-legged figure grunted and
charged.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane did not have her shotgun. She
spun and tripped, her boots entangled in a fallen dress. Shrieking insanely,
she grabbed for the machine pistols attached to her belt. One was stuck
underneath her. The other came up in her right hand as the figure jumped at
her. She fired and saw in the muzzle flashes that it was a ghoul and she had
been unconscious for much too long.
牋牋牋牋牋?The ghoul slammed Jane to the
hardwood floor, crushing the wind from her lungs. It grabbed her face and
forced her head back, opening its reeking mouth so it could tear out her throat
with its teeth. She caught its own throat with her left hand to hold it back,
but it was too strong and came steadily on. She got the pistol out from under
it with her right hand, pulled up against the bungee cord, raised the pistol to
the ghoul抯 head beside her own, and squeezed the trigger with the gun muzzle
pressed to its temple. The lightning blasts showered her face with dead flesh
until the thirty-round magazine was empty and the ghoul fell across her, half
its head missing.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane struggled wildly out from under
the ghoul, shoving the body over on its back with a strength born of sheer
panic. She knew she needed the Italian shotgun, but she also knew she had to
get out of the mall instantly because the sun had fallen and millions of ghouls
on her side of the Earth were wide awake and looking for something warm to eat,
she was in the midst of them and they knew it, they knew exactly where she was
thanks to the gunfire, and they were coming.
牋牋牋牋牋?She ran back to Tiffany抯 body. 揑抦
sorry!?she shouted to the skull, snatching up the shotgun. Even with her ears
ringing, she heard more ghouls coming. 揑抦 sorry!?she shouted, even louder,
and ran for the truck. She thought she heard many feet, naked feet thumping and
pounding the hardwood floor in every direction. She did not think there could
be so many ghouls in the mall. It sounded like a mob of them.
牋牋牋牋牋?She got to the driver抯 door of the
pickup and grabbed the handle with her left hand, jerking the door open. She
jumped inside, shotgun going in first in her right hand.
牋牋牋牋牋?Enormously strong hands grabbed her
left boot and tried to pull her out of the cab. She spun, aimed the shotgun
blindly, and fired. The blast lit up the cab (the screaming in her ears went on
forever) and a naked man with his left arm and shoulder blown off fell back
from the door. The window of the truck was blown out as well. Another face
appeared and reached for her through the missing window. She shot his face into
a spray of red oatmeal (completely deaf, nothing but screaming in her ears) and
grabbed the door by the armrest and slammed it shut.
牋牋牋牋牋?She let go of the shotgun to turn
the keys in the ignition. She always left the keys in the ignition and was
infinitely glad now that she did. Someone rammed into the window on the
passenger side, pounding on the glass with both fists. The engine roared to
life and Jane threw the truck into reverse. The pickup抯 tires howled on the
hardwood, and the truck lurched backward, swinging around inside the
night-black foyer of Cashman抯. The sun was down, and Hell抯 finest were coming
out of every store aisle and office and stairwell in search of dinner.
牋牋牋牋牋?And Jane Lane was the only hot meal
on the planet.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane spun the truck to get the front
aimed at Cashman抯 entrance. A hand came in the side window and grabbed her by
the hair, almost tearing her scalp away. The pain was beyond imagining. She
floored the gas and the truck skidded around, still moving backward, smashing
through display cases and clothing racks. The hand on her hair slipped off, but
another hand caught the ledge of the window. Jane let go of the steering wheel
and grabbed for the machine pistol on her left side.
牋牋牋牋牋?The pickup struck something that
didn抰 give and came to an instant stop, snapping her head back and then
throwing her forward into the steering wheel. There hadn抰 been time to buckle
in first, and she抎 disconnected the airbag weeks ago. Dazed, she pushed
herself back in her seat, aimed the machine pistol out the window on her left
without thinking, and squeezed the trigger. Something tried to grab her even
through the hail of lead she put into it, but she finally blew its hands off
and it staggered back to regroup. Jane dropped the pistol, magazine empty,
flipped the truck into drive, and floored it.
牋牋牋牋牋?The tires squealed and smoked. She
was right on the edge of passing out, and it took all she had to grip the
steering wheel and keep her focus. The truck roared out of Cashman抯 and
slammed into two ghouls coming in the entrance. One was thrown to the left, the
other went under the truck and made it bounce as it shot down the main
concourse.
牋牋牋牋牋?And in the truck抯 high-beam
headlights, she saw them. Ahead of her and on all sides around her were ghouls
and more ghouls and even more ghouls, ghouls everywhere, more than Jane had
dared dream existed. They were in the hundreds, the thousands. She knew now
they had been hiding from her in the cavern-like mall, in the places she never
went. She抎 caught only the stupid ones in the daytime, and there weren抰 many
stupid ones left. Now she was the stupid one.
牋牋牋牋牋?Most of the ghouls got out of her
way, but a dozen did not move quickly enough, and she ran over them without
stopping. A ghoul came out of a store on her side, and the impact with the
truck threw him over the hood and into the back. She hit the brakes to turn
left down the side corridor to get out of the mall, sliding and knocking down
an old cell-phone kiosk before the truck took off again.
牋牋牋牋牋?Something thumped against the back
of the cab. She glanced in the rear-view mirror but saw nothing. It抯 back
there, she thought. Gunning the engine, she headed for the way out down the
short side corridor. Another ghoul snatched at her through the shattered side
window but missed and fell away. She heard something moving in the bed of the
truck behind her. The shotgun fell against the far door, out of reach.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane braced herself against the
steering wheel and slammed the brakes to the floor. Everything in the cab flew
to the front. Something crashed into the back window of the pickup. It sounded
like the ghoul fell out of the truck bed, but she couldn抰 be sure. She gunned
the engine again, and the truck shot out the smashed glass doors of Cranberry
Commons, into a moonlit parking lot. The hulks of a hundred abandoned cars lay
scattered before her. She looked in the rear-view mirror but saw nothing behind
her. Cool air blew in from her broken window, clearing her fogged mind.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane circled the lot and managed to
retrieve the shotgun, laying it on the seat beside her. She then ejected the
magazines for her machine pistols and reloaded both, driving with her knees.
Tomorrow, she抎 have to get a new truck, if she lived that long. She shivered
violently, then guided the truck out of the parking lot and onto the main road,
heading for the high-school garage and safety. Nothing would stop her.
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria, Tiffany had said. You抮e
late.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane flinched, then hit the brakes
again. She was at an unlit crossroads. Would Daria do something to herself if
she wanted badly enough to die? Would she do it tonight?
牋牋牋牋牋?If Jane went straight ahead, she抎
reach the high school in two minutes. If she turned right and went south, she抎
be at Daria抯 in five minutes. She checked her watch. It was almost ten p.m.
Sundown was an hour and a half ago.
牋牋牋牋牋?You抮e late.
牋牋牋牋牋?She swore and turned south, gunning
the engine as she raced down the boulevard into the depths of the night.
Chapter Four
He had heard the midnight bells
jangling: if you permit
this evil, what is the good
of the good of your life?
桽tanley Kunitz, 揂round Pastor Bonhoeffer?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Ghouls attacked her truck at a curve
before the intersection of Shelley Boulevard and Bradbury, flinging themselves
at the vehicle as it roared by. One got an arm through the side window and
caught the front of her hunting jacket, but she swerved and passed inches from
a signpost that tore the ghoul away. Its severed hand fell like a fat spider
into Jane抯 lap. She struck at it in terror, knocking it to the cab floor by
the brake. Ghouls arose from tall grass and dropped out of trees and crawled
out of broken windows all around her. Stopping was impossible. She stamped on
the hand and kept driving.
牋牋牋牋牋?At Shelley and Wyndham Way, Jane
remembered too late that a light pole had fallen across the road a week
earlier. She had not bothered to move it, being occupied with other things. The
truck hit the pole and jumped, the front right wheel landing on a luckless
ghoul and smearing it for yards across the asphalt. Bouncing, the pickup spun
out clockwise on screaming tires, flinging Jane sideways into her door, then
came to a halt facing the way it had come. Engine running, the truck started
forward again, but Jane whipped the wheel to the right and floored it. The
truck spun around in the direction of the intersection with Glen Oaks. The air
stank of burning rubber.
牋牋牋牋牋?A female ghoul with greenish hair
leaped on the hood of the truck and grabbed a windshield wiper. It reached for
the missing side window with its other hand, baring its rotting teeth at her
through the pane. Jane turned right at the intersection with Glen Oaks at over
forty miles an hour. The pickup came up on its left wheels and almost rolled.
The ghoul抯 lower half slipped off the side of the hood, but it hung on. Jane
flattened the gas pedal as she headed down Glen Oaks, hitting two ghouls that
tried to jump the truck from the front.
牋牋牋牋牋?When she reached sixty halfway down
the street, she slammed on the brakes again. The windshield wiper snapped. The
green-haired ghoul fell off and went under the left front tire. Skidding, the
truck flattened a mailbox, then jumped the curb and fishtailed through the tall
grass of a half-dozen lawns as Jane fought for control. Accelerating again, she
ran down a lone ghoul on the street, spun the truck around, and roared back up
Glen Oaks toward Daria抯.
牋牋牋牋牋?Approaching the Morgendorffers?house, she drove off the street again, crossing three overgrown yards before
she hit the brakes and skidded to a stop in the middle of Daria抯 yard. Her
broken-out left window faced the house. Jane looked up梐nd was startled to see
a bright white light shining through the boards over the first-floor living
room on the left side. Her voice failed for a moment, but she took a deep
breath and shouted, 揇aria!?br>
牋牋牋牋牋?After a moment, the bright
light at the boarded-over window went out.
牋牋牋牋牋?A quick look around showed no ghouls
in Jane抯 immediate vicinity, but she knew she had only a few seconds left
before the first ones reached her. She shouted, ?i>Daria!?again at the
top of her lungs. Risking one more look around, she picked up her shotgun,
opened the cab door, and stood up on the ledge, one foot still down on the
brake. ?i>Daria!?she cried over the door. 揅an you hear棓
牋牋牋牋牋?Something came out of the clothing
in the bed of the truck, behind Jane. She heard it and tried to turn around,
but she lost her balance and grabbed for the door.
牋牋牋牋牋?The ghoul from the mall grabbed her
left arm with superhuman strength and jerked her out of the truck. Clutching
the shotgun, Jane fell sideways, pulling the ghoul over the edge of the cargo
bed to land together in the long, flattened grass. Still in drive, the truck
began rolling away into the neighbor抯 yard, picking up speed as it went. Jane
saw it go and knew she was finished. The keys to Daria抯 house were inside it.
牋牋牋牋牋?She came up with the shotgun, but
the ghoul leaped on her and bit into the right sleeve of her thick jacket,
painfully catching her forearm. The shotgun was knocked out of her reach. Jane
then grabbed the machine pistol on her left side, raised it, and pulled the
trigger repeatedly. Nothing happened. The gun was jammed. Panicked, she kicked
and punched with the pistol butt in a futile effort to stun the creature and
escape.
牋牋牋牋牋?Pinning Jane beneath it, the ghoul
ripped out the fabric from her jacket sleeve and bit down at her face. She
blocked with her right hand, but the ghoul抯 teeth sank into her thick glove.
Shrieking, Jane pounded on the ghoul抯 head with the useless machine pistol,
then dropped the gun and grabbed the hilt of the eighteen-inch Bowie knife on
her left side. She jerked the blade from its sheath and stabbed the ghoul hard
in the side, sinking the blade between its ribs up to the crosspiece. The knife
wound had no visible effect except to increase the ghoul抯 rage.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane howled in agony, her right hand
trapped between the ghoul抯 jaws. The other ghouls would arrive in seconds and
tear her to pieces. They would eat her alive, thrashing and screaming, and
dying would take far too long. The ghoul抯 glistening orbs pressed down inches
from her face.
牋牋牋牋牋?Her left hand grabbed the hilt of
Bowie knife. She yanked it free, jammed the point into the ghoul抯 cheek, and
slashed outward through its jaw muscles. The ghoul抯 mouth fell open, but it
held her down until she drove the blade up through the roof of its mouth with
all her strength. It convulsed in shuddering spasms and released her.
牋牋牋牋牋?A charging ghoul was almost on her.
She lunged to her left, came up with the shotgun, and rolled on her stomach,
half under the dying ghoul. Ignoring the pain in her right hand, she pulled the
trigger, blasting away the ghoul抯 abdomen and lower spine. It fell in halves
on the lawn ten feet away from her. She fired again and again at oncoming
ghouls until the magazine was empty.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane got up. Her pickup truck was
still moving but overwhelmed by a mob of ghouls six houses east on Glen Oaks.
The creatures obviously were attracted to light and sound梑ut some of them had
not been fooled. A scattered herd of them came on in the moonlight from all
sides. Jane ran to the door of Daria抯 house and hammered on it, screaming
Daria抯 name. She turned, saw that she was out of time, and grabbed her machine
pistols. She ejected the jammed magazine on the left machine pistol and had
enough time to reload it when the first ghouls reached her.
牋牋牋牋牋?Her back to the door, Jane raised
both weapons and opened fire, swinging her arms left and right to shower the
ghouls with 9mm armor-piercing ammunition. Spent shells rained around her. A
dozen ghouls and more fell, but more came on, reaching for her with
blood-encrusted fingers. One took four hits in the chest but came in to grab
her right-hand weapon. She aimed at its face and emptied the magazine. The
brainless ghoul fell into her, knocking her into the door and down to the
sidewalk among the smoking brass cartridges. Her left machine pistol fired
wildly into the dead until it too was empty.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane Lane struggled and screamed and
kicked, but it was over. A ghoul with one eye shot out grabbed her throat and
bent down to tear the skin off her face with its teeth.
牋牋牋牋牋?The front door of the
Morgendorffers?house opened. Jane saw it in the corner of her eye through a
haze of terror. A small, long-haired, bone-thin figure in a skirt and glasses
came out of the house in a blur, its right arm holding something. Too late,
Jane saw the axe in Daria Morgendorffer抯 hand, the same axe Daria had used to
chop her family and everyone else into manageable pieces before she ate them.
Daria windmilled her right arm as she came, the axe swinging up and over in a
flash. Jane couldn抰 get the scream out of her throat fast enough.
牋牋牋牋牋?The axe dived into the back of the
ghoul抯 head, bursting its skull and showering Jane with its rotting contents.
Daria jerked the axe out and turned as another ghoul reached for her. The axe
whipped around, taking the ghoul抯 right arm off at the elbow, then whirled
again in a horizontal arc. The top of the ghoul抯 skull flew off, spilling its
contents as the creature fell. A third ghoul bent down to grab Jane, but Daria
chopped down and broke its spine below the neck. The ghoul fell writhing at
Jane抯 side.
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria grabbed Jane by her jacket,
pulling her with incredible power out from underneath the dead ghoul. Jane
scrambled to her feet and half-ran while being half-dragged toward the door.
Daria threw Jane into the house, then lashed down and split a charging ghoul抯
skull down to its shoulders. She whirled and buried the axe in the face of a fifth
ghoul, jerked it out, and ran into the house before either ghoul hit the
ground.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane fell to the floor beside the
stairway leading up to the second floor. She started to get up, meaning to run
upstairs to escape further attacks, but Daria ran in and slammed the door
behind her, snapping the deadbolt and locking the knob in moments. Startled,
Jane stayed on the floor, staring at her friend梙er dead friend, she
remembered, her dead friend who ate dead humans at night. Daria ignored her;
she snatched up a table set against the wall by the door, dumping the empty
vase on top to the floor. She then jammed the table on its side between the
front door and the bottom step of the stairway, preventing the door from
opening if the locks gave way. This done, she put her back against the door,
braced her legs against the carpet, and waited, staring into space.
牋牋牋牋牋?Something thumped against the door,
then pounding and crashing could be heard and felt from the outside. Jane
crawled back from the door, expecting at any moment it would be smashed open,
but after a few moments, the pounding ceased. The sounds that Jane heard a few
seconds later were those of ghouls noisily feeding.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane抯 gaze went to Daria, visible
in the faint light from a camping lantern on the living room抯 coffee table.
Jane took in the hollow cheeks and bony limbs, the way her clothing hung
loosely from her emaciated frame, her unblinking eyes, the unnatural steadiness
of her posture梐nd her failure to breathe. Daria抯 hair and clothing were
completely covered with brain matter, dark fluids, and shreds of flesh from the
ghouls she had fought. Jane, every bit as gore-soaked as Daria, looked down at
the splattered axe in Daria抯 right hand, promptly forgetting about the ghouls
and her injuries. She remembered instead why she had not wanted to come here
after dark, and wondered with an increasing degree of panic why she had done so
anyway.
牋牋牋牋牋?Losing interest in events outside,
Daria stood away from the front door, her feet between the overturned table
legs. She raised the axe and inspected it through her filthy eyeglasses, then
glanced at Jane.
牋牋牋牋牋?揥ait,?said Jane in a high, soft
voice. She put up her injured right hand to ward off an attack. She had no
weapons left, but anything would be useless against someone who could fight
like Daria. Jane could not mesh the image she had of Daria now with that of
Daria earlier, cradled in her arms like a child. She wondered if there were two
of them in the house, one unconscious and one murderous.
牋牋牋牋牋?Finished with her inspection, Daria
put the axe to her lips and licked it with her dark gray tongue. She licked the
blade off on one side, then the other, then began working over the whole axe
head and shaft. She was very thorough. In a minute, the axe was spotless. Daria
licked off her hands next, picking up every bit of matter on them, and then
picked things out of her hair and off her clothes and swallowed them.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane watched with enormous eyes, the
white visible all around.
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria looked again at Jane, lowered
the axe, and walked over to her. Jane shrank back against the floor, hands
raised. She curled up to make herself very small and whispered 搉o?and 損lease
don抰?over and over. Daria set the axe by Jane抯 feet, then knelt down and
inspected Jane with steady eyes. No trace of emotion entered her face. She
reached down and pulled something out of Jane抯 hair and put it in her mouth,
chewing and swallowing.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇aria,?Jane whispered, 損lease don抰 hurt me. Please. I won抰 hurt you. I would never do that. Please don抰梔on抰 hurt me.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria continued to pick things off
Jane for a few moments more, then reached up and took Jane抯 face in her cold,
grimy hands. Breathless with terror, Jane realized she抎 wet her pants when
fighting the ghouls outside, and she had the urge to do it again. She prayed,
though she knew God had stopped listening to prayers ages ago.
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria stared closely into Jane抯 face, and?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Can you hear me? said Daria抯
unmistakable voice in Jane抯 mind.
牋牋牋牋牋?揥h-what??said Jane.
牋牋牋牋牋?You can hear me, then.
Daria kept Jane抯 face still, her eyes locked on Jane抯.
牋牋牋牋牋?揧es,?Jane gasped. 揧es, I can!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Interesting, said Daria
inside Jane抯 head. I had not suspected this was possible until today. I
thought I was dreaming all those times before, when you were washing me off. I
thought I could hear you thinking and singing. Were you singing to me today,
when you bathed me?
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane was confused for a moment, then remembered and nodded rapidly.
牋牋牋牋牋牋牋?Was it a Tracy Chapman song,
that one about riding in her boyfriend抯 car? Yes, that was it. 揊ast Car.?You
were singing it to me. I knew it.
牋牋牋牋牋?揧ou . . . you抮e reading my mind?
You were reading my mind when I was棓
牋牋牋牋牋?I think so. Every time you
touched me in the daytime, I could hear what you were thinking. It didn抰 come
through very clearly until today. Were you wearing gloves the other times when
you touched me, but not today?
牋牋牋牋牋?揧es! Yes, latex gloves, or leather gloves if I wasn抰 washing you off, so that I wouldn抰 catch梠h! I don抰 mean that棓
牋牋牋牋牋牋牋?You didn抰 want to catch a
disease from me, because I don抰 wash after I eat. That makes sense. That抯 a
smart thing to do.
牋牋牋牋牋牋牋?You did the right thing. I
can tell you are very frightened of me, Jane, but I will not hurt you. I know
you.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 won抰 hurt you, either! I swear I would never hurt you! You know that!?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane, please be a little less
afraid of me. I am a monster, you are right about that, but I can抰 do
anything about it. I would not hurt you, though梟ot ever.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane swallowed. 揙kay,?she said weakly. 揑抦 sorry. I抳e not had a very good day.?She struggled against sudden tears. 揑抳e not had a very good day in a long time.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria held Jane抯 head as Jane
closed her eyes and thought about everything that had happened to her since
dawn. Tears ran down her face in twin streams.
牋牋牋牋牋?You have had a terrible time. I
am sorry to hear about Tiffany. That is a strange situation. I don抰 know what
to think about it.?I knew Trent was
dead, though. You抳e written to me about that before. I did not realize how
strongly you felt about Trent抯 death, though I should have. I had a crush on
Trent once, I remember.
牋牋牋牋牋?揌e liked you. He always did.?/p>
牋牋牋牋牋牋牋?I know. He didn抰 love me,
but that抯 okay. I抦 still sorry he抯 gone. Daria抯 voice hesitated. My emotions are
very . . . low, almost dead in a way. I抦 not making a joke. I am sorry
that Trent is dead, and I feel bad about it in a certain way, but I don抰 feel
the pain of it like you do. Don抰 be offended, please. I think it抯 because of
my condition. I think clearly enough, but I don抰 react to things like I once
did. I don抰 feel angry or sad, and I抦 certainly not happy. All my feelings
are . . . muffled, barely there. I can抰 do anything about it.
牋牋牋牋牋?The tears had stopped. 揙kay,?Jane said. 揙kay.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I read your diary when I awoke.
It means a lot that you leave something for me to do during the night. Your
stories told me a lot about what抯 happened to the world. I wonder about that
constantly. It抯 beyond my understanding.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane finally caught her breath. She was unnerved, but recovering. 揑抦 glad you like what I write. I抣l never be a good writer like you were梐re, I mean, sorry. I抣l keep writing anyway.?She carefully reached up and put a hand against Daria抯梠nly to touch, not to pull the cold, gory hands away from her. Her only hope of survival for the night, she knew, was to show no threat and to treat Daria as much as possible like the friend she had once been梐nd might still be.
牋牋牋牋牋牋牋?You are my friend, said Daria. That never
changed. You are safe here.
牋牋牋牋牋?So Daria was reading her
thoughts. Hiding anything from her would be impossible. Jane accepted that as
best she could.
牋牋牋牋牋?Why did you come here tonight and
risk death?
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane swallowed. 揑 was afraid you would hurt yourself,?she said. 揑 read your note. It frightened me. I couldn抰 take it if anything happened to you.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?For a few seconds, Daria did not
respond. You were at the mall? she finally said.
牋牋牋牋牋?揧es. I can抰 go there anymore. The ghouls are all over it. I found some things for you. They抮e in the truck, if the ghouls leave anything left of it by tomorrow morning.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Did you bring me a Fuzzy Wuzzy
Wee-Bit?
牋牋牋牋牋?揥hat? A what??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Forget it. It was a joke. The
doo-dads you asked about, the ones I won long ago, are in my closet in a shoe
box.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane forced herself to smile, but
she was still frightened.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane, I am going to let go of
you, so we won抰 be able to converse like this for a while. Let抯 clean
ourselves up, and we can talk again in an hour梐fter I finish eating in the
kitchen. You should not go in there yet. You interrupted my meal.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane nodded quickly. 揙kay.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria let go of her and got up from
the floor. Jane reached up and wiped her cheeks.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇aria??said Jane as Daria was leaving. Daria turned. Jane opened her mouth to say something, then burst into tears. She laid her head on the floor and cried for several minutes, shaking all over. At last, she raised her head. 揑f you want to kill me,?she said through her sobs, 搃t抯 okay. You can kill me.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria stared at her solemnly, then
walked back. She reached down and touched Jane on the cheek.
牋牋牋牋牋?I would never do that.
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria then straightened and went
into the kitchen.
牋牋牋牋牋?After a minute, Jane wiped her eyes,
got up, and walked up the stairs, stepping over the table barring the door. She
did not touch the axe Daria had left on the floor beside her. Once at the top
of the steps, she stopped, unsure of where to go. She finally went to the
bathroom that Daria and Quinn had once shared, so tired she could barely walk
straight.
牋牋牋牋牋?From the bathroom closet, she pulled out one of several dozen one-gallon bottles of distilled water she had stored there during a period of impulsive stockpiling. She didn抰 touch the stockpile if she could avoid it, always bringing in extra water and the like when it was needed. 揇oesn抰 matter now,?Jane mumbled. Stripping off her clothes, she tossed them in a corner of the bathroom. She decided to wash them later and hang them up to dry. If she tried to escape the next morning, she could?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane shook off the thought. She would not try to escape from Daria. There was nowhere to go but the high school, anyway. And, with a little shock, she realized that she trusted Daria. It抯 the first stage of madness, she thought, but if that was true, she accepted it. She and I are too much alike. We always were. If she did kill me, at least I would die with a friend梑ut I don抰 think she will. She half regretted that.
牋牋牋牋牋牋牋?Picking up the jug of water,
she got a bar of disinfectant soap and a washcloth, and then went into the
nonworking shower to wash off. She shivered in delayed reaction to the night抯
events, then scrubbed her skin all over when she thought of how many
disease-carrying microbes she抎 been exposed to since she woke up梐nd when she
thought of Daria抯 cold, corpse-splattered hands pressed to her cheeks.
Chapter Five
For
I am every dead thing
In
whom love wrought new alchemy.
桱ohn Donne, 揂 Nocturnal upon St. Lucy抯 Day?/p>
牋牋牋牋牋?An hour later, Jane and Daria met
again in the living room. The battery-powered camping lantern softly illuminated
the area. Lacking anything clean to wear, Jane wore a blue bed sheet wrapped
around her like a toga, and Daria wore the same in white. Jane refrained from
making the usual toga-party jokes. It was warm in the house from the daytime.
She knew it would get intolerably hot before long without air conditioning. Must
get lots of little fans tomorrow, she thought.
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria lay on her back on the long
sofa, her head resting on a pillow. Her hair was still wet from the sponge bath
she抎 given herself in the garage. She still smelled faintly of death. Jane sat
on the other end of the sofa with Daria抯 cool feet resting on her warm thigh.
Daria抯 telepathy worked through any level of direct touch, through any bodily
parts except their hair. Their experimentation fascinated them and continued
for some time before they settled down on the couch. As they talked, Jane
played with Daria抯 toes. They looked normal enough, except for their pale
yellow color and bony appearance.
牋牋牋牋牋?揝o, how come we抮e not dead??Jane asked. 揧ou know what I mean.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I抳e thought about that for a
long time, Daria said. Her deadpan voice rolled clearly inside Jane抯 head,
as if her words came out exactly between Jane抯 ears. I think it began with
you. I don抰 know how you came out to be immune to that super-flu. You were
sick a week before it came, I remember. You were laid up in bed with a fever,
right after you got those exotic bird feathers for that hanging decoration you
were making.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 remember that,?said Jane absently. 揑 kept putting the feathers in my mouth to hold them while I was working.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Ah, then a virus or bacteria from
the birds could have been transferred from the feathers into your own system,
and you got sick. Your body then developed a peculiar immune-system response
that knocked out the super-flu later. I抦 only guessing, but it could be that
you inoculated yourself by accident. If that抯 what happened, you survived
because you have a bad habit of putting things in your mouth.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane meditated on this. It made
sense, though her grasp of the details of biology was shaky at best. She picked
up her cigarette from the bowl-turned-ashtray on the coffee table and took a
long drag on it.
牋牋牋牋牋?You抮e supposed to make a rude
comment about putting things in either your mouth or mine.
牋牋牋牋牋?揥hat??Jane looked at her cigarette. 揙h, sorry. Missed my cue.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?We both have bad timing. I sure
do. I抦 sorry about licking the axe when you came in. Old habit.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane frowned, tapping her cigarette on the bowl. 揙ld habit? What old habit??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Picked up from my non-pizza
dining habits. When I get hungry, I can抰 help myself. I have to eat right
away.
牋牋牋牋牋?揙h. Um, are you by any chance, uh棓
牋牋牋牋牋?No, I抳e got a while yet. Don抰
worry. Eating like I have, by the way, is how I think I kept my brain going
when no one else did. At least, that抯 the impression I get from your memories.
No one else has any intelligence except me, among those who caught the
super-flu and . . . changed. Yes, you抮e right, died. I should call it what it
is.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane exhaled another long drag. 揑抦 sorry. When things come to mind, I can抰 sort them out before you get to them.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I抦 not offended. I actually like
knowing what you really think.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 see. And is what I really think any different from what I say??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Not by much. You抳e been more
honest with me than anyone else ever was. I trust you, but I trust you even
more because I can see inside you.
牋牋牋牋牋?揝o you can see everything I ever
thought about you and Tom and all that, right??May as well face the only
issue that ever divided us, her stealing my boyfriend. Doesn抰 matter now. Too
long ago, all forgiven. Feels like it happened to someone else, anyway.
牋牋牋牋牋?I can see what you thought, if
you think of it, said Daria. I am sorry for the pain I caused you, but
that was in another life. We are too far beyond that now.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane nodded, lost in thought. An
old, embarrassing memory unexpectedly surfaced.
牋牋牋牋牋?That抯 an interesting thing to do
with a zucchini, said Daria. You抮e梟o, you抮e not joking. Your sister
Penny did that?
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane fought off an urge to shove Daria抯 feet off her lap. 揧es. I walked in on her in the bathroom when I was about five. I had no idea what she was doing. I wonder sometimes if she had any idea what she was doing.?She sighed. 揑 wish I knew where she was. I guess it抯 better that I don抰.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I抦 sort of glad you can抰 see
into me like this. It must be driving you crazy for me to do it. And I can tell
that it is. Sorry. Daria pulled her feet back and broke contact.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane looked over. After a moment, she reached out, took one of Daria抯 cool feet in her hand and moved it back onto her leg. 揅ome on, keep talking to me,?said Jane, not looking at Daria抯 face. 揑抣l get used to not having any secrets left. I haven抰 had anyone to talk to for months.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Same here. That抯 why I wrote
that note to you, asking you to kill me. Ghouls get lonely, too. Being cooped
up in here and eating dead things got to me after a while. You can tear up the
note, by the way. It抯 out of date.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 wouldn抰 do anything to you, anyway. With our luck, we抎 just be reincarnated and go through high school again.?/p>
牋牋牋牋牋牋牋?I remember that joke from
before. I don抰 remember when you first said it, but I remember it.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 don抰 remember either. I抦 not being very creative.?Jane bit her lip. 揑 really am sorry I told you to stay in here like this. I didn抰 know what it was like for you.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?More than anything, I just wanted
to see you.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane swallowed and looked away. 揑 was terrified of you. I saw you only in the daytime, and I cared about you, but I was still afraid. I still am.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I understand. I don抰 blame you.
Monsters should stay out of sight.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑抦 the bloody monster, not you,?said Jane bitterly. 揑 killed棓
牋牋牋牋牋?And I killed, too. We抳e both
killed, but we killed bad things. Trent wasn抰 Trent anymore when he came back.
You know that. When he was alive, you did everything you could for him. The
world changed us and changed around us, and we抳e had to deal with it to
survive. If we hadn抰 killed, if we hadn抰 protected ourselves梐nd each
other梬e would not be here sharing this time together. The bad things would be
here instead.
牋牋牋牋牋?Perhaps they are, Jane thought before she could stop herself. 揧ou抮e not a monster,?she said quickly. 揧ou抮e not a bad thing, no matter what I think.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I am what I am, if you抣l pardon
my Popeye philosophy. I changed. I am different now. You are, too, but only in
a human way, not in a monstrous way like me.
牋牋牋牋牋?揌a,?said Jane. 揑 am too more different than you are. You抮e not going to win this one.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I wish we were having this
conversation over pizza.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 don抰 think . . . never mind.?Jane swallowed and felt her face burn. She crushed out her smoke. 揝orry.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?You don抰 think you could stomach
my choice of toppings. Go ahead and say it. Trust me, you can抰 say anything
now that will rub me wrong. You抮e simply telling me the truth. You can抰
imagine how refreshing this is for me. Everyone has lied to me in little ways
or big all my life. Finally, I have someone who can抰 lie to me, someone who
won抰 lie to me, and even though I抦 dead or worse, I appreciate it. Say anything
you want, think anything you want. I抦 not going to eat you.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane shivered. 揚(yáng)lease don抰 say that.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I apologize. A pause. I am
grateful for all that you did for me. I can抰 believe you went through so much
trouble just for me. It must have been quite a chore all this time. Yes, I see
that it was.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑t was okay. It kept me going.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?You told me that I was the only
reason you had left to live.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane nodded slowly. 揈veryone else is gone. It抯 no fun being alone. I used to think it would be wonderful to live somewhere far away, so people couldn抰 bother me, but now that I抳e done it, I miss people very much.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?So do I. I really hate meeting
them in the way that I am.
牋牋牋牋牋?揝hh,?said Jane. Her hands began to massage Daria抯 foot. 揅an you feel that??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Yes. I feel the pressure. It
feels . . . okay, I guess. Comforting, sort of. I can抰 tell temperature, and
nothing really hurts or causes pain. My pain sensors must be shorted out. I
wonder if that has something to do with why I can抰 feel emotions now, or can抰
feel them very well.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑t feels . . . well, you know what I抦 going to say.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?It does feel good to be touched,
I agree. Even after death, it feels good.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 wanted to ask you,?said Jane, changing the subject. 揧ou said earlier that . . . you said eating made you smarter, something like that.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?What happened was, you fed me
right from the start. You didn抰 mean to do it, and I抦 sure it never occurred
to you to do that, but you did. I believe now that it saved me from going mad
from hunger, turning into one of those things out there. I抳e always had
something to eat. First?i> Daria waved an arm toward the upstairs ?i>and
later, you shot all the ghouls near the house. I used to go out and pick up the
bodies at night and bring them in. I never had to go far, and I never went
hungry.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 knew you were doing that.?Jane shivered and felt the need for another cigarette. She stopped rubbing Daria抯 foot and laid her hand over it, warming it. 揟hen when I found you outside that time, last October, I got so upset when I brought you back in . . . I knew you抎 go out and do it again, so I just started leaving the bodies in the house, so you never had to go out. I couldn抰 have stood it if you . . . if anything had happened to you. I almost thought you were trying to get yourself killed by those other creatures.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I got caught outside because I
was careless about the exact time of sunrise. You didn抰 have to worry about me
taking care of myself against the others, though. Because I always had enough
to eat, I was always better off than they were. I move and think faster than
they, and I use tools and weapons when they don抰. Best of all, I kept my
intelligence. My memories stayed intact. I think the others lost any chance for
that because they go hungry so often. Most of them probably don抰 eat for days
and days. I think it destroys their minds.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane grimaced. The subject was
causing her stomach to turn over. She was glad she hadn抰 eaten anything in a
while, despite her hunger. She tried not to think of Daria chopping her family
into pieces, or how she swept through the ghouls outside with the axe. It
didn抰 seem possible.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane, listen to me for a moment.
I know this is grossing you out, but listen. You don抰 understand what the
hunger is like. When I get hungry, I have to eat immediately. I have no control
over myself, or barely any. I suppose I have a little. I didn抰 eat you when I
brought you in, right? And I was starving when I did it. Well, not too
starving, as I was already in the middle of?/i>
牋牋牋牋牋?揙kay, I know, I know.?Jane leaned forward and picked up her cigarette pack, pulling another out. She thought it would settle her stomach and ease her nerves. 揥ait.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?You have to hear me out.
牋牋牋牋牋?揊ine, fine. Just a second.?Jane lit up and took a long pull, holding it in her lungs for as long as she could before breathing it out through her nose. 揙kay. Go ahead.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?As long as I抦 able to eat when I
need to, I抦 fine. You kept my mind from deteriorating into nothing, like the
rest of the world out there. You and I are probably the only people left on the
face of the earth who can read a book. You escaped it by accident. I escaped it
only because of you.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane sat and said nothing, holding
her cigarette.
牋牋牋牋牋?I was never able to say to anyone
in my whole life that I loved them. Now that I抦 like this, I just?Daria
paused and got up on one elbow, reaching for the coffee table by the couch. She
caught hold of a paperback book and lay down again, flipping through the pages.
It was the poetry book by Millay. Thank you for bringing this in. I was looking
for this exact book. Here it is. It抯 the last part of one of her sonnets.
牋牋牋牋牋?揟hus in winter stands the lonely
tree,
牋牋牋牋牋?揘or knows what birds have vanished
one by one,
牋牋牋牋牋?揧et knows its boughs more silent
than before:
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 cannot say what loves have come
and gone;
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 only know that summer sang in me
牋牋牋牋牋?揂 little while, that in me sings no more.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria stared at the page, then lay
the book flat on her breast. Summer does not sing in me now. I am dead
inside, but not because my heart doesn抰 beat and my lungs don抰 work and I
can抰 feel heat or cold. I抦 dead inside because I can抰 feel joy or pain,
sorrow or anger, none of it. I抦 dead as a nail. The closest thing to love I
feel now, the last bit of it that I have left in me, is what I feel for you梐
kind of relief at seeing you and knowing you抮e helping me. If I were alive,
Jane, I would tell you that I love you. I抦 not alive, but I still want to say
it. Thank you for caring about me, knowing what I抳e become, how low I抳e
fallen. I don抰 even know why you bother, but I抦 grateful. If I were capable
of loving, I would love you.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane continued to look away. She
held her cigarette to one side, blinking. Finally, she put the cigarette in the
bowl she was using for an ashtray and covered her face with her hands. 揥hy did
you say that??she said as her voice broke. Daria watched silently as Jane
cried.
牋牋牋牋牋?揕ook at us!?Jane finally said aloud, her voice rising. 揋od, look at us! Why did this happen? I blow people抯 heads off, I shoot them, and it抯 like my job! I don抰 even care about it anymore! Those monsters try to kill me every chance they get, and God damn it, why did this happen? Why you and me? What did we ever do to deserve this??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane wept. They said nothing more
for several minutes.
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria finally sat up, her head down,
and put a cool hand on Jane抯 thigh. You need to sleep, she said. Go
upstairs to my old room. I don抰 go up there anymore except to throw garbage
out the window into the backyard. Sleep in my bed. It抯 safe.
牋牋牋牋牋?An unwanted memory came back to Jane
in full force. 揑 can抰,?she said. 揟hat was where I put you when you died,
when棓
牋牋牋牋牋?My bed is the only place that I
can put you, Daria said. I will stay down here in case anyone breaks in,
and you wouldn抰 want to be down here when I eat again. And the other beds
upstairs aren抰 . . . clean. Please don抰 make me elaborate.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 get the message.?Jane still hid her face. Her stomach growled. 揑 left some canned food upstairs for myself a few weeks ago. I should break into it.?She wiped her face and asked in a low, choked voice, 揂re you getting hungry, too??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?A little. Best for you to go
quickly. Daria took her hand away and got up from the sofa. She walked into
the kitchen and stood there in her toga, doing nothing. When Jane put out her
cigarette and left the living room, Daria walked quickly to the large,
sheet-wrapped object on the floor by the sink, then knelt beside it and began
to uncover it with trembling hands.
* * *
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane awoke with a start. It was
pitch black in Daria抯 bedroom. Someone was standing next to her bed, she was
sure of it, but it was impossible to see who it was. She held her breath and
listened. There was no sound at all.
牋牋牋牋牋?It was Daria, then.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane had thought this might happen.
Her rush of fear lessened. She reached up and rubbed her forehead with a sigh.
Her heart thumped against her chest and she was breathing more quickly than
usual, but she was already calming down. Daria would not try to kill her, but
Jane still felt vulnerable. She wore only a set of red satin pajamas that once
belonged to Daria抯 mother. Daria抯 pillow still smelled of the old Daria that
Jane once knew. Jane had slept very soundly on it.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane sniffed. A light floral scent
was in the air. Perfume? Is Daria wearing perfume? Why? Maybe she thinks she
smells bad. She wants something from me.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane cleared her throat. 揥hat time
is it??she whispered.
牋牋牋牋牋?After a moment, she felt a cold
fingertip touch her right shoulder. Just before one o抍lock. I抦 sorry if I
woke you. I抣l go.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane forced a laugh. 揧ou know, in the old days, I抎 be awake right now, painting something. Now I sleep all night and stay awake all day. What a screwed-up life.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?It is, yes. The fingertip
remained on her shoulder. The smell of perfume was stronger now. Jane knew the
scent had probably been Quinn抯. It barely masked a faint, sickly odor of
rotting meat.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑s anything wrong, Daria??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?No answer came. It was still pitch
black all around. She looked in Daria抯 direction but saw nothing. But Daria
can see me, she thought.
牋牋牋牋牋?Yes, said Daria. It came
with the rest of the transformation. I can see in the dark. Heat vision, I
think. I need regular light only for reading or cleaning up.
牋牋牋牋牋?揧ou can see in the . . . oh.?She didn抰 have a flashlight with her when I found her in the garage梐nd it was completely dark in there. And I bet she reads when she eats, too. 揥hat can you see of me??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I see your whole body, even under
the blanket. You shine with heat all over. You抮e a light in the shape of a
human being. The heat from you reflects from everything in the room, even me,
and lights it up as if you were the sun.
牋牋牋牋牋?揜eally??said Jane. 揥ow. I saw a movie once about using infrared light in artwork. Is that what it is, what you can see??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Yes, short-wave infrared light is
really just heat. My eyes must have changed with everything else. I don抰 know
why. Evolution gone wild.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑s something wrong??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?No answer.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇aria? What抯 the matter??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?And then Jane knew. She came fully awake.
牋牋牋牋牋牋牋?It抯 not what you think, said Daria quickly. It抯
not.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane carefully reached up with her
right hand. She found Daria抯 thin arm and felt upward. Her fingers brushed
against the cold skin of a dead woman抯 breast. Daria was not wearing anything
on her shoulder, either. Oh, Jane thought. Oh, no.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇aria,?said Jane slowly.
牋牋牋牋牋?I抣l leave, said Daria, but
she did not go.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane抯 hand rested on Daria抯 shoulder, feeling every bone beneath it. Neither said anything for a time.
牋牋牋牋牋牋牋?It抯 not what you think, said Daria again. I just
thought . . . you抳e already seen me like this, many times, and I thought it
wouldn抰 . . . it really isn抰 what you think.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑s it??said Jane softly. She was
positive now she was going mad.
牋牋牋牋牋?No. It抯 not . . . it抯 nothing
bad, I think. I don抰 know. I抣l go if you want me to.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane said nothing. She waited.
牋牋牋牋牋?I feel life in you, so much life,
said Daria at last. Her thoughts rushed out. When I touched you downstairs
that first time, it was like I was brought to life. I saw your thoughts and
memories. I remembered what you remembered, felt what you felt. I began to live
again. You抮e a fire in the darkness, and I am cold and alone. Everything
inside me is dead. I抦 dead and I抦 lonely. I never knew how alone I was until
tonight. I have nothing without you, nothing at all. If you weren抰 here now,
if you left me, I would go outside and let the others have me and get it over
with.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇on抰 say that.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I抦 dead without you.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane抯 lips parted. 揂nd you want to live.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Yes, I do. I want to live.
牋牋牋牋牋?揂nd I take it that . . . this is just a guess on my part . . . you want me to move in with you.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Yes, yes, I do, please. I抣l
defend you at night, and you can hunt on your own in the daytime when it抯
safe. No one will hurt you. You could get your truck back or one of the cars
around here and move everything out of the school tomorrow and come live here
with me. We can be together. I won抰 be alone anymore. I know it抯 selfish, but
I want this very much. I won抰 be cold. I won抰 be dead, not dead inside. I
can抰 stand it, Jane, going on like this. I抣l do anything for you. Please . .
. please think about it.
牋牋牋牋牋?揇aria棓
牋牋牋牋牋?Don抰 be afraid of me, please.
I抣l go away if you ask, but please?/i>
牋牋牋牋牋?揘o. No. Listen. I don抰 know where this is heading, and I抦 about to freak out. No棓 She gripped Daria抯 shoulder to keep her from going 摋stay with me. I won抰 lie to you. I think I know what it is you抮e asking of me, and I hope I know what it is that you抮e not asking for. It had better not be the second thing, but the first thing桰 need time to think about it, okay? I have to work it out in my head for a minute.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria made no reply.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 held you when you died, Daria. Do you remember that? Do you see that memory inside me? I held on to you in this very bed because I didn抰 want you to die, but you died in my arms anyway. The fever took you away from me. You were burning up all over, you were raving and shivering just like Trent. When you died, all the heat in your body left you, but I held onto you and tried to warm you up until you were cold, Daria. I held you all night until you were as cold as the grave. Do you remember that??o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?No answer.
牋牋牋牋牋?揧ou know what it is you抮e asking me to do? I抦 going to wake up tomorrow morning at dawn, next to you, and you抣l be as cold and dead as you were then.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?No answer. Daria started to go, but
Jane held her back. The pressure from her hand was gentle but firm. Daria could
have left if she had tried harder.
牋牋牋牋牋?揑 won抰 ever let you be alone, Daria,?said Jane. 揑 held you all night when you died. I won抰 let you be alone again, ever.?She took a deep breath, closed her eyes, and shivered. 揋o put something on, okay? A nightgown, pajamas, nightshirt, anything, then come back. Hurry.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?I only want to touch you,
said Daria. That抯 all. Nothing else, I swear. Just for a little while.
牋牋牋牋牋?揋o put something on and come back.?Jane shivered again. 揟hen get in bed with me. Go, Daria.?o:p>
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria turned away, breaking contact.
Soft footsteps padded across the room. A closet door opened and shut. Fabric
rustled.
牋牋牋牋牋?I can抰 believe I抦 doing this. I
can抰 freaking believe it. I抳e finally gone around the bend.?Even Daria抯 saner than I am. She wants to
live, but I just want to die. She wants to touch me so she can feel alive
again, but I only hope that someday I will die, truly die, and I won抰 come
back like her or the others. I want to die the old way. I want to forget
everything that ever happened to me and never come back. I can hold her and try
to warm her, because if I do that, maybe one day I can die forever. I can do
it.
牋牋牋牋牋?The soft footsteps came back.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane flipped back the light blanket,
scooting back toward the wall. 揅ome on,?she whispered.
牋牋牋牋牋?The narrow bed creaked. Someone sat
next to Jane, then put her legs under the blanket and lay on her back.
牋牋牋牋牋?揜oll over on your side,?Jane
whispered. 揥e don抰 have much room.?Daria did so, facing away from her. Jane
lay on her side, facing the same direction, and made sure Daria had half the
pillow. Thick hair that smelled of perfume and rot tickled Jane抯 nose. She
gently brushed it away.
牋牋牋牋牋?She heard a hand reach back and feel
around for her.
牋牋牋牋牋?揙kay,?Jane whispered. She needs
to touch me so she isn抰 alone. Jane moved closer, trying to keep her
distance, then gave up. Gently, she put her arms around the dead woman in bed
with her, pressing against the small body like two nested spoons. It was
strange how well they fit together. Freezing hands seized Jane抯 warm ones and
pressed one to an icy face. The other hand was moved inside the neckline of an
oversized nightshirt and pressed over a heart that no longer beat.
牋牋牋牋牋?Jane tried hard not to think of the
night she held Daria when she died. This is different. She needs me. Maybe I
can warm her back to life. I have to try. She shook her head, trying not to
inhale the strands of Daria抯 hair against her face, or their odor.
牋牋牋牋牋??/span>I promise to wash more carefully next time, Daria said. I抦
not used to doing it at home. I抣l use scented shampoo. I know I don抰 smell
very good.
牋牋牋牋牋?揊orget it. I抣l live. Little joke
there. Daria, listen, if you get hungry棓
牋牋牋牋牋?I抣l leave immediately. Don抰
worry about it, please. I won抰 hurt you. I just want to be here with you.
Please. A long pause followed. Good night, Jane.
牋牋牋牋牋?You can抰 sleep, can you?
Jane thought. She was too tired to speak, but she felt strangely comfortable. Unless
that抯 what you do when the sun comes up. Won抰 you get bored lying awake all
night?
牋牋牋牋牋?I don抰 mind, Daria said. I抦
okay. I like this.
牋牋牋牋牋?Daria抯 hands and body seemed less
cold, though Jane knew it was only because the blanket trapped living body heat
that was warming Daria抯 corpse梥imple physics, nothing more.
牋牋牋牋牋?I抦 dead tired, Jane thought,
not even aware of the pun. Good night, Daria.
牋牋牋牋牋?Good night.
牋牋牋牋牋牋牋?The last human alive on
Earth drifted into sleep. Wrapped in her arms, her only friend felt a heart
beating against her back, and it roared like a fire in the darkness.
Original:
10/23/03