‘There’s safety in numbers,’ he said, turning his back on her again. ‘Those bloody things proved it last night, didn’t they? More survivors has got to equal more of a chance in my book…’
‘You’re wrong,’ Michael interrupted. He was standing in the kitchen doorway. Neither Emma or Carl knew how long he’d been there or how much he’d heard. He leant against the door frame with his arms crossed in front of him.
Carl shook his head.
‘Leaving here would be a fucking stupid thing to do,’ Michael added.
‘Staying here seems like a fucking stupid thing to do too,’ he snapped back.
Michael took a deep breath and walked further into the kitchen. He sat on the edge of the kitchen table and watched the other man as he tried desperately to busy himself and avoid eye contact with the other two survivors.
‘Convince me,’ Michael said as he took his coffee from Emma. ‘Just how much have you thought about this?’
For a second Carl was angry, feeling that Michael was patronising him. But then he decided that he sounded as if he was at least going to listen to what he had to say.
‘I’ve thought long and hard about it,’ he replied, ‘this isn’t something that I’ve just decided to do on a whim.’
‘So what’s your plan?’
‘Get back to Northwich and try and get to the community centre. See who’s still there…’
‘And then?’
‘And then find somewhere secure to base myself.’
‘But you said you didn’t want to lock yourself away and hide. Aren’t you just going to be doing that somewhere else instead of here?’ Emma asked.
‘There’s a council works depot between the community centre and where I used to live. There’s a bloody ten foot wall right the way around it. Once we’re in there we’re safe. There’s trucks and all kinds of things there.’
‘How you going to get in?’
‘I’ll get in.’
‘And what if there’s no-one at the Community Centre?’
‘I’ll keep going to the depot on my own.’
Michael stopped asking questions and sat and thought for a few seconds.
‘So when were you thinking of going?’ he wondered.
‘We’ve got to go out for supplies at some point in the next few days,’ Carl answered. ‘I figured I’d try and get some transport while we were away from the house and then I’ll take it from there.’
‘We could go and get supplies today,’ Michael said, surprising Emma who looked at him with an expression of utter disbelief on her face.
‘What the hell are you doing?’ she hissed at him. ‘Christ, are you thinking of going too?’
Michael shook his head.
‘Seems to me that you’re going to go whatever we try and say or do to stop you.’
Carl nodded.
‘I’d go now if I could.’
‘Then there doesn’t seem to be any point in Emma or I wasting our time trying to convince you that you’re making a mistake.’
‘I don’t think I am. You are right though, you’d be wasting your time.’
‘And if we try and stop you leaving we’ll probably end up beating the crap out of each other and the net result will still be that you leave. Am I right?’
‘You’re right.’
He turned to face Emma.
‘So we don’t have a lot of choice, do we?’
‘But, Mike, he’ll end up dead. He won’t last five minutes out there.’
Michael sighed and watched Carl disappear into the store room.
‘That’s not our problem,’ he said. ‘Our priority is to keep ourselves safe, and if that means that Carl leaves then Carl leaves. Think of him as a homing pigeon. We send him on his way today and, with a little luck, if things don’t work out he’ll bring the rest of the survivors from Northwich back here with him if he manages to find them.’
Emma nodded. She understood everything he said but still found it hard to accept.
‘He’s a stupid fucking idiot,’ she hissed under her breath.
33