EVERYONE WOKE UP AROUND 7 (just like they would have in the store).
We all woke up hungry and Niko doled out 1?3 can of tuna for each of us and 1?4 of a power bar.
Jean was moved to generosity by this and gave everyone a can of Fresca.
Warm Fresca and dry tuna. Yum.
Sahalia let it slip that she had some gum, but wouldn’t share it. Not one little stick. Fortunately, Jean let me rub some toothpaste around on my gums so I wouldn’t have breath like I ate a donkey’s butt all day.
I would have thought that we would all want to stay there in the trailer for as long as possible, but surprisingly enough, we do not.
I’m writing this last piece, then we’re going. I think it was because it was so small in there. We were all on top of one another.
And when the kids heard that the Army guys are only 10 miles away, everyone got excited.
‘We can make 10 miles no problem!’ Max crowed. ‘We can do 10 miles in our sleep!’
‘Yes, sir, that’s my baby. No, sir, don’t mean maybe!’ Ulysses sang in his Mexican accent. Where he learned that, I could not say.
‘I don’t know,’ Batiste said. ‘10 miles is a lot.’
‘It’s going to be hard work, but I know we can make it,’ Josie said, patting Batiste on the arm. She’s always very encouraging for the little kids. I think that even if we were marching off a cliff, she’d keep everyone peppy and excited.
‘But Max is staying,’ Jean asserted. ‘Baby, you’re home now and I’ll keep you real safe here with me. You’re staying, right, pally?’
Max thought about it for maybe 3 seconds.
‘No offense, Auntie Jean, but these guys is just as much family as you is.’
‘But I’m a grown-up, Max! And maybe your dad’ll come here looking for me!’
Max screwed up his face like he really didn’t think so.
Jean got down on the floor and looked him right in the eye. ‘This is your best chance, hun. You’re staying!’
‘Auntie Jean, you ever meet my dog, Lucky?’ Max said. ‘I had this dog named Lucky and he was a mutt what we found out back of the Safeway and he was missing one eye. And my dad says, “Aw, they did right to put him out with the trash, son. That dog’s no good.” But I swore and swore I’d take good care of him if they’d let me keep him and my mom said, “Over my dead body,” and then my dad said, “Maybe it’s not such a bad idea,” and that’s around when my dad moved out. Anyway, I took Lucky to the free animal clinic and they sprayed him and gave me worm drops for him and also cut off his man parts. He cleaned up real good. But my mom still hated him. I don’t know why.’
‘Honey, all I’m saying is I want you here with me—’ Jean tried to interrupt.
I guess she’d never heard Max tell a story. He just continued right on.
‘So then for Christmas, my mom goes and gets me a brand-new puppy from the actual pet store. A Chow, real fluffy with a bow. And she goes, “You can keep this new one, baby, but you gotta let me take old Lucky to the shelter,” and I said, “No way.” Oh, she yelled and put up a fuss and said how do you not want this darling fluffy Chow and instead you want that mangy, stinky so-and-so.’
‘I just think you’ll be safer here—’
‘And then she went and gave that Chow dog to her sister Raylene and played it off like she always had meant it to be for her anyways. Well, then on the last day of vacation, do you know what happened?’ Max asked us all. ‘I was walking in the lot behind the sewage treatment plant and Lucky starts barking his head off and what do I see? I’m about to step on a rattlesnake! It’s just there sleeping over the slops tank, where the ground is nice an’ hot and it’s shaking its tail and hissing at me, and then Lucky rushes forward and bites the thing on its neck and kills it dead!’ He looked at us, as if his story completely answered Jean’s concerns.
After a few moments, she said, ‘Honey, I don’t understand that story. What does it mean?’
‘It means stick with the dog you know, Auntie Jean,’ Max told her. ‘Stick with the dog you know.’
Niko wants us all to drink lots of water. He’s made the point that the kids who need to keep their masks on will not be able to drink out there. I keep forgetting that, but he’s right. If they lift their masks, they’ll get a hit of the compounds and they could die.
Or Josie could turn into an O monster and kill us all.
Jean had the idea that we should take some cigarettes with us. Then we could get into a car and Sahalia and I could fill it with smoke and then the others could take off their masks to drink.
Sounds like a lot of work just to get a drink but it’s what we’ll have to do. We do not really need to be concerned with the harmful effects of cigarette smoke, at this point.
Jean gave Niko 3 packs, which is a pretty expensive gift.
All the while she was crying and made Niko promise if we get to help to send someone back for her.
We left the trailer park and followed the toll road.
Niko had us walk in this order: him, then Max and Ulysses, holding hands, then Sahalia, then me and Batiste, holding hands, then Josie at the rear.
It bothered me that I had to hold hands with Batiste, but I got used to it. And he was really scared, so it was a good idea.
Only Niko was allowed to have a flashlight. He was right, because when the little kids had them, they’d shine them all around and that was worse than not seeing around because every so often they’d find a body and then they’d scream and cry.
Niko kept his light on the ground. A few feet in front of us. Steady and measured.
It’s hard to walk in the dark, but it was sort of okay, because it was like we had blinders on. We couldn’t see to the left or the right, just where the flashlight was.
We didn’t walk on the road. Niko felt we might be attacked.
Instead we walked on the side about 20 feet off, parallel to the road.
On the road were lots of cars and lots of bodies. Things were moulding over, the white fuzz growing in drifts over cars and bodies.
It made me think of Mr Culleton, in Earth Studies, and our block on composting. He said that in a compost pile, things returned to their most dense, nutritive form.
If the sun ever comes back, maybe this will be the best farmland ever.
I know that’s a stretch, but that’s the only nice thing I can think of to say about all the slime and mould.
Anyway, we walked.
And Batiste got blisters, which he told me, and he got thirsty, which he told me, and he got hungry, which he told me.
And I said, ‘I’m sorry about that, Batiste,’ every time and it actually seemed to help him. Then I’d give his hand a squeeze and that also seemed to help him.
It was a hard, hard walk.
Finally, Niko led us back up to the road. He started flashing the light into cars.
I nudged Batiste. ‘I bet we’re going to stop for a water break!’
He smiled at me, and squeezed my hand.
Niko flashed the light in a few cars, but there were bodies in them. He made us stand back from him and wouldn’t let us look in.
I didn’t mind standing back. I didn’t need to see any more bodies and none of the little kids did either.
On some cars, Niko tried the doors but couldn’t get them open.
Then, suddenly, he ducked down and motioned for us all to duck down. He cut the light.
A motorcycle was coming.
It darted and veered between the cars. The light seemed really bright and it made me realize that my eyes had become somewhat adjusted to the darkness.
It came closer and closer.
It was a biker guy wearing goggles – he had a long beard and a leather jacket and everything. And riding on