Afterward, the next morning, when
There was the need for food, of course, hiding just behind the need for water-and what could rain possibly do for that? Eric peered up at the sky, puzzling over this dilemma, but without any success. All he managed to accomplish by focusing upon it was to rouse his lurking sense of hunger. 'Why haven't we eaten again?' he said, his voice sounding far away even to himself-thick-tongued, weak-lunged.
'Are you hungry?' Amy asked.
It was a stupid question, of course-how could he not be hungry?-and he didn't bother to answer it. After a moment, Amy stood up, stepped to the tent, unzipped the flap, slipped inside.
'It's not stopping,' Stacy said.
She meant his wound, he knew. She sounded worried, but he wasn't. He didn't mind the bleeding, was too drunk to feel the pain. It was going to rain. He was going to lie here and let it wash him clean. Clean, he'd find the strength to reach inside himself, into that slit he'd cut below his rib cage, reach in with his hand and search out the vine, grasp it, yank it free. He was going to be okay.
Amy returned from the tent. She was carrying the plastic jug of water, the bag of grapes. She set the jug on the ground, opened the bag, held it out toward Stacy.
Stacy shook her head. 'We have to wait.'
'We've missed lunch,' Amy said. 'We were supposed to have lunch.' She didn't lower the grapes, just kept holding them toward Stacy.
Once again, Stacy shook her head. 'When Jeff gets back. We can-'
'I'll save some for him. I'll put them aside.'
'What about Mathias?'
'Him, too.'
'What's he doing?'
Amy nodded toward the tent. 'Sleeping.' She shook the bag. 'Come on. Just a couple. They'll help with your thirst.'
Stacy hesitated, visibly wavering, then reached in, plucked out two grapes.
Amy shook the bag again. 'More,' she said. 'Give some to Eric.'
Stacy took two more. She put one in her own mouth, then dropped one into Eric's. He cradled it on his tongue for a moment, wanting to savor the feel of it. He watched Stacy and Amy eat theirs; then he did the same. The sensation was almost too intense-the burst of juice, the sweetness, the joy of chewing, of swallowing-he felt light-headed with it. But there was no satisfaction, no diminishment, however modest, in his hunger. No, it seemed to leap up within him, to rouse itself from some deep slumber; his entire body started to ache with it. Stacy dropped another grape into his mouth, and he chewed more quickly this time, the swallowing more important than the savoring, his lips immediately opening for another one. The others appeared to feel a similar urgency. No one was talking; they were chewing, swallowing, reaching into the bag for more. Eric watched the clouds build as he ate. All he had to do was open his mouth, and Stacy would drop another grape into it. She was smiling; so was Amy. The juice helped his thirst, just as Amy had promised. He was beginning to feel a little more sober-in a good way-everything seeming to settle a bit, to coalesce around and within him. He could feel his pain, but even this was reassuring. It'd been a stupid thing to do, he knew, digging into himself with that knife; he couldn't quite grasp how he'd found the courage to attempt it. He was in trouble now. He needed stitches-antibiotics, too, probably-but he nonetheless felt strangely at peace. If he could just keep lying here, eating these grapes, watching the clouds darken above him, he believed that everything would be all right, that somehow, miraculously, he'd make it through.
It came as a bit of a shock to realize that-abruptly, without any apparent warning-the bag was almost empty. There were only four grapes left; they'd eaten all the rest. The three of them stared at the bag; no one spoke for a stretch. Pablo continued his ragged breathing, but Eric had reached the point where he barely even noticed it anymore. It was like any other sort of background noise-traffic beyond a window, waves on a beach. Someone had to say something, of course, to comment on what they'd done, and it was Amy who finally shouldered this responsibility.
'They can have the orange,' she said.
Stacy and Eric remained silent. There'd been a lot of grapes in the bag; it ought to have been easy enough to set aside allotments for Mathias and Jeff.
'I have to pee,' Stacy whispered. She was talking to him, Eric realized. 'Can you hold your shirt?'
He nodded, taking the T-shirt from her, maintaining the pressure against his side. He could feel the vine again, shifting about inside him, just beneath the pain. It had gone away after he'd cut himself, but now it had come back.
'Do I have to use the bottle?' Stacy asked Amy.
Amy shook her head, and Stacy stood up, moved across the clearing. She didn't seem to want to venture into the vines. She crouched with her back to them, and Eric heard her begin to urinate. It didn't sound like very much, a brief spattering, and then she was rising again, pulling up her pants.
'They can have some of the raisins, too,' Amy said, but quietly, almost as if she were speaking to herself.
Stacy returned, sat beside Eric. He thought she was going to resume holding the T-shirt against his wound, but she didn't. She picked up the plastic jug of water, uncapped it, poured a little on her right foot. Eric and Amy stared at her in astonishment.
'What the fuck're you doing?' Amy asked.
Stacy seemed startled by the sharpness in her voice. 'I peed on myself,' she said.
Amy reached, snatched the bottle from Stacy's hand, recapped it. 'That's our
Stacy sat for a moment, blinking in a theatrical way, as if not quite understanding what Amy was saying. 'You don't have to swear,' she said.
'We'll die without that-you know? And you're just-'
'I wasn't thinking, okay? I wanted to clean the pee off my foot and I saw the jug, and I-'
'Jesus fucking Christ, Stacy. How can you be so out of it?'
Stacy waved at the sky, the gathering clouds. 'It's going to rain. We'll have plenty of water.'
'So why didn't you wait?'
'Don't shout, Amy. I said I'm sorry, and-'
'Sorry doesn't bring the water back, does it?'
Eric wanted to say something, to stop or distract them, but the right words weren't coming to him. He recognized what was happening, what was starting here. This was how Amy and Stacy fought, in sudden, intense eruptions that seemed to arrive out of nowhere, little flash floods of rage that would come and go with a violence matched only by their brevity. A single inadvertent word could set them off-more often than not when they'd been drinking-and within seconds they'd be flailing at each other, sometimes literally. Eric had seen Stacy slash Amy's cheek with her nails, deep enough that she drew blood, and he knew that Amy had once slapped Stacy so hard that she'd knocked her to the floor. Then, inevitably, at the very peak of their ferocity, these encounters would collapse upon themselves. The girls would look at each other in mutual bewilderment, wondering how they'd