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"It's not like I don't deserve it."
"Guys, wallow in whatever you're wallowing in later," Jazz snapped. "Focus, already. This is serious."
Lucia sucked in a deep breath. "We go in through the front door, take the device to the server room and position it. Meanwhile, Ma
"You're going to get yourselves killed," Borden said. He was sitting at the far end of the table, with his hands handcuffed in front now, not behind. "Jazz, don't do this. You have no idea what you're getting into, you don't. Really."
"You have no idea what we're getting into, either, Borden," Lucia said without looking up. "We've tried it your way. It hasn't worked. Time for a new approach."
He was rubbing his head furiously now, handcuffs clinking together. "Jazz, I'm begging you. Please."
Jazz said, "Ma
"Absolutely," he agreed. He sounded depressed. "But I don't like it. I don't like any of this."
"You think I do?" she snapped back, and covered her eyes with her hands, pressing. "I'm sorry. Tired. I want this over, dammit."
"And I want everybody out of my house," Ma
"Fine," Lucia said. Jazz started to protest, but Lucia overrode her. "Fine. I have no objection to that. Jazz, you'll be okay here for a while? I need to go home."
Jazz immediately looked alarmed. "What's wrong?"
"Nothing." Everything. "I just need a shower and clean clothes and a nap. Plus, the item's being delivered to me there. I'll bring it here once it arrives."
"I don't like you going out," she replied.
"She's perfectly safe," Simms said.
"See?" Lucia pushed back from the table and had to brace herself. She felt light-headed from too much caffeine, not nearly enough rest. God only knew how much abuse her body had taken in the past few weeks, but it was starting to make its displeasure with the situation very clear. "A nap is all I need."
"Take it here," Jazz said. "We have an unbelievable bathroom, too. Seven showerheads. Marble tiles. Whirlpool." It sounded, literally, like heaven, but she needed something that she couldn't get here. Silence. Peace. Solitude.
She shook her head. "I'll go," she said. "Everybody else stays." Jazz opened her mouth. "I mean it, damn you. Follow orders, for once in your life." McCarthy snorted. "Ma
He tossed her the keys to the Hummer before she'd even gotten the words out. She nodded in gratitude.
"Gas it up," he called after her. "And wash it while you're at it!"
Because, of course, saving the world wasn't work enough.
She was at the steel door when she felt someone behind her, and turned to see McCarthy. He leaned a hand on the metal, another on the wall, boxing her in. "You really going?" he asked. "Yes. I really am."
He lowered his voice. "You want to take a test?" She nodded mutely. "Can I come with you?"
"It isn't safe. You heard Simms."
"Sweetheart, I've been in danger my whole life. I survived some nights in Ellsworth that you wouldn't believe. I think I can survive a day in your company." He was slowly leaning closer, as if her gravity was pulling him in. "Let me come with you. Please."
She looked over his shoulder. Jazz was studying floor plans and ignoring Borden, and he was staring at her with naked suffering on his face.
"Let me." Ben's breath was warm against her face, his voice an intimate whisper in her ear. He pulled back enough to look into her eyes. "You told me to make a choice based on what I want, not what you want. Well, this is it."
She turned away, opened the door and went down the stairs. She looked back. He was standing at the top, watching her, holding the door open.
"Coming?" she asked.
The door boomed shut behind him as he ran down the steps toward her.
It seemed oddly normal, shopping at the drugstore— picking up a few odds and ends she knew she was ru
Pregnancy tests were at the top. She stared at the choices blindly for a moment, then reached up and took one at random. It looked simple enough. As she was reading the back, she said, "This could all be a lie, you know."
"Yeah. And if it isn't, it probably didn't even work, what they were—doing to you. It doesn't, right? Not all the time"
She added the test to her basket and went to the checkout counter. The clerk didn't make any comments, and neither did she. She wondered idly which was more uncomfortable, buying intimate things like this or seeing a steady progression of them all day. Teenage boys with boxes of condoms. Hell, middle-aged matrons with boxes of condoms. Pregnancy tests.
The clerk met her eyes briefly and smiled. "Good luck." She led the way back to the vehicle, climbed in and piloted the thing to her apartment.
The apartment was undisturbed. The upgraded security monitors—Jazz's doing—showed no intrusions, but then, if Gregory decided to pay another visit, they probably wouldn't. He'd been the one to come and get her; she knew it beyond any doubt. That first night, when she'd woken on the couch and found him in the apartment, had been his dry run, to test the system. He'd almost warned her then, she realized. Almost.
She locked the door and reset the alarms, and exchanged a silent look with McCarthy.
"You do what you need to do," he said, and went into the kitchen. He pulled a beer from the fridge. "I'll be here."
She went into the bathroom with the box, took off her clothes and grimaced at the state of her hair and general hygiene. She stepped into the shower and let herself fall into a kind of trance, lulled by the warm water, the floral scents of the shampoo and soaps.
Maybe it isn't true. Maybe none of this is true.
She finished and stepped out of the shower, damp and glowing, and decisively ripped open the package to find the test kit.
Ten minutes later, she stared at the single blue line on the strip.
Oh, my God.
She found herself sliding down against the tiled wall, staring at the plastic holder and the blue line. Such a simple thing, to make so many terrible things real.
She dumped it into the trash can, then followed it with her clothes, for no better reason than she never wanted to wear them again, or see them again. She washed her hands with vicious thoroughness.
She wrapped herself in her soft fleece robe, damp hair straggling down her back, and opened the bathroom door.
McCarthy stood there, holding out two choices—beer and soft drink.
She took the soft drink.
He let out his breath in a long, low sigh and turned away. She thought he was all right for a second, and then he let out a harsh yell, punched the wall with his right hand, then leaned his forehead against the plaster.
"Feel better?" she asked neutrally. She sipped the cola, grateful for the sweetness, grateful for something that felt normal in this increasingly alien world.
"My hand hurts," he said. "Define better."
"Why did you want to be here?"
"Why did you want me to be here?"
"Turn around," she said.
He did, setting his beer down on the table untouched. She put her drink down as well, and crossed the small distance between them. Neither of them reached out.