“Is Michael alive?”
Michael reached toward her and Sarah snatched at his hand. The boy came
into her arms, both of them falling; then Sarah pushed them up toward the
shore. Michael coughed.
“He’s alive, Annie,” Sarah whispered.
Michael hugged her, coughing still, and then Annie’s arms were around her
neck and the little girl was laughing and Sarah was laughing too. She
whispered, ‘Thank God for the Y.M.CA. pool!”
Rourke sat sipping the coffee.
“So when the war broke out—well we were always pretty cut off from the
outside world, but we knew about it. The television reception here was
never very good, but we lost the television stations, then the radio
stations we could get. We knew … all of it, as it happened. We sat up
through the night in the town square, most of us, and we could see the
lights on the horizons around the valley. We knew what was happening. We
all sort of decided that living in a world that had been destroyed
wouldn’t be living at all. All but six families—and they left. They’re
probably dead now. See, we don’t raise much more than what we have in
truck gardens. The gas stations had just gotten their supplies before the
war took place, and with no one going anywhere, well, we didn’t use much
gas. A lot of us—mostly everybody—just walk to work and such.”
“So you decided to keep things going—just like before,” Rourke told her.
“More or less.” She smiled, sipping at her coffee, then pouring fresh
coffee for Rourke. “At least to try.”
“But—”
“But we realized it couldn’t last forever. We only had so much. So we
worked it out carefully—all of us. We all did. We were always close-knit—”
“You’re not from here,” Rourke said flatly, sipping his coffee.
“No. I’m not. It was my husband who was born here. He went away to medical
school. We married and he brought me back here with him.”
“How did (he town live?” Rourke asked her. “I saw that factory—”
“That’s only been here the last seven years. It was all cottage industry
before that. The factory makes some sort of equipment for the space
program or the defense department; the people who work there never were
quite sure.
“It doesn’t make anything, anymore,” Rourke said soberly.
“The factory is still running—”
“Making what?” Rourke heard himself snap.
“What they did before—everything is like it was before.”
“That’s useless. That’s insane! For what purpose?” Rourke asked her. “I
mean—O.K., the holiday thing is pretty obvious. Make everyone happy as
long as you can—but then what? What’ll you do when the food runs out and—”
“We won’t do anything.”
Rourke lit one of his small, dark tobacco cigars—he was running low on
those and would have to restock at the Retreat. “What was your cottage
industry?”
“Fireworks.” She smiled.
He felt strange—perhaps at the realization of what she was telling him.
“You’re not—”
.
“When strangers came in after the Night of the War, we asked them to stay.
Some of them decided to join us. The rest of them are being taken care
of—and they’ll be released. That’s why the police have gone to twelve-hour
shifts.”
“When’ll they be released?”
“Christmas was always our favorite holiday here, the reunion of family and
friends. It’s—”
Rourke hammered his hands palm downward onto her desk, then glanced over
his shoulder toward the library behind him through the glass partition; it
was dark, empty. He looked at his watch. It was after five. His vision was
blurring.
“I wanted you to stay.”
Rourke stood up, suddenly feeling strange, lurching half across the desk.
“Coffee,” he murmured.
“We have the entire valley mined with explosives. And the night after
tomorrow night, there’ll be a fireworks display and then all of us …
we’ll—”
Rourke fell across the desk, cursing his stupidity. He looked up at her.
“Mass—”
“Suicide.” She smiled, finishing his thought. “All two thousand three
hundred forty-eight people in the town. That’s why no one minded the lie,
John. When I called you Abe.” Rourke was having trouble hearing her,
seeing her. He snatched for one of his Detonics pistols, but she held his
wrist and he could not move his arm. “I was the only one who didn’t have a
family. My husband is dead. We had no children—there wasn’t ever the
time—the time to have children. But now I won’t die alone, John.”
He started to talk, his tongue feeling thick, unresponsive.
“I helped my husband in the clinic. I know how to use his drugs. You won’t
be able to do a thing, John—until it’s too late, and then you can die with
me, John.”
She was stroking his head, smiling, and he felt her bend over to him and
kiss his cheek. “It’ll be all right, John; this is the better way. We’ll
all die and it will always be the same—normal, like it used to be.”
Rourke tried to move his mouth to speak; he couldn’t.
It was heavy rain now, cold but not freezing, dripping down inside the
collar of his permanently borrowed &#;Army field jacket, his hair too wet to
bother with pulling up the hood. His gloves were sodden. The Schmeisser
was wrapped in a ground cloth and the Browning High Power was under his
jacket. His boots were wet, the Harley having splashed through inches-deep
puddles in the road surface, and the going was slow to avoid a big splash
that could drown the engine.
He squinted through his rain-smeared glasses— Kentucky. He was entering
Kentucky.
Paul Rubenstein wondered two things: would he ever see Natalia again now
that she was safe with Russian troops, and had Rourke made it through the
storm to find Sarah and the children yet?
Natalia had told the Russian commander that he, Rubenstein, was a Soviet
spy who had been escorting her through American territory because he posed
as one and was known to the Resistance people operating the area, thought
to be one of them. His stomach churning as he’d done it, Rubenstein had
agreed, backed up her story. Nat alia V credentials checked; he had been
released.
They had shaken hands only, but she had blown him a kiss by .pursing her
lips as they had spoken a few yards from the Soviet troops. Then he had
boarded his machine and started back into the storm.
He had looked at her over his shoulder once; she hadn’t waved, but he’d
felt she would have if she could have.
And John—that Rourke had gotten through the storm at all wasn’t something
over which Rubenstein worried— Rourke was all but invincible, unstoppable.
But, as he released the handlebar a moment to push his glasses up from the
bridge of his nose, Rubenstein wondered—had John Rourke found them yet?
Tildie had wandered ashore minutes after Sarah had taken Michael out of
the water; Annie had been the first to spot her. The animal was visibly
shuddering.
Sarah had built a fire by the shoreline in the shelter of some rocks and a
red clay embankment; then having done what she could to warm the children,
she had mounted Tildie—feeling the only way to warm the animal was to
exercise her, then rub her down. Promising to keep them in sight, Sarah
had started along the water’s edge perhaps twenty feet above the
shoreline, the wind of the slipstream around her and the animal, chilling
her to the bone, but the animal responding.
Sarah clutched the patched-together reins, leaning into Tildie’s mane to
let the animal break the wind for her. The air temperature was cold, but
vastly warmer than it had been. In her heart, she knew the reason why she
rode—to think; and she had another reason as well, to search for Sam, her
husband’s horse, her son’s horse. Tildie couldn’t carry Michael, Annie,
and herself for very long.
And there was affection as well, the affection between human and animal;
she wanted to know that Sam was
alive or dead, not half-broken and crushed and suffering.
She reined m Tildie, about a quarter-mile closer to the damtiow. On tire
red clay embankment beneath her she could see a shape, stained with mud,
moving in the tree line.
“Sam!” Sarah wasn’t ready to risk the embankment with Tiidie. She
dismounted, securing Tildie’s reins to a sapling Georgia pine, then
started down the muddy embankment toward the trees by the shore. She could
see the form clearly now—an animal.
She broke through the tree line, stopping. “Sam!”
The horse, its white hide covered in a wash of red— blood?—started toward
her. Closer now, she could see it was only mud. She held out her hands.
The animal, frightened and weary, came toward her, nuzzling against her
outstretched hands.
“Sam!” She hugged the animal to her, the wetness of her own clothing
seeming to wash away some of the red clay mud on the animal’s neck. She
checked the saddle, that it was secure, then swung up, catching up the