Both of them had improved quite a lot. They were faster, trickier, stronger, and far more devious.
Now, though . . .
Nix felt clumsy and stupid. Lilah got through her guard again and again and again.
“I—I’m sorry . . . ,” said Nix in a tiny voice.
“Sorry?” Lilah withdrew her spear, raised it over her head, and with a savage grunt drove it down. The blade bit inches deep into the sand right beside Nix’s face, chopping off several strands of curly red hair. “Sorry? Are you training for combat or practicing for your own death, you silly town girl?”
Nix covered her face with her hands and shook her head.
“I’m sorry,” was all she could say.
Lilah straightened and stood over Nix for a while. Then she threw her spear down in disgust and sank onto the ground beside the weeping girl.
“What is it?” Her voice was always a ghostly whisper.
Nix rolled toward her and wrapped her arms around Lilah, clinging to her as a child might. Clinging to her as a drowning person might.
They never heard the zoms coming until white fingers clamped like iron around their flesh.
16
WHEN RIOT COULDN’T BEAR TO stare at her mother any longer, she went to the playground to find Eve. They sat together on a blanket, with sewing gear scattered all around them: needles, spools of thread, balls of colored yarn, thimbles, and all sorts of fabric scraps.
As Riot watched, Eve used a pair of scissors to cut a piece of pink felt into the shape of a blouse. Almost the shape of a blouse. Currently it looked more like a blob or a three-legged pink turtle. Eve’s little pink tongue tip stuck out from the corner of her mouth as she worked.
Overhead, a pair of capuchin monkeys that had long ago escaped from a private zoo in Las Vegas capered among the leaves. The nuns had named them Charity and Forbearance. The children called the monkeys Chatty and Foobear.
“There!” said Eve proudly as she held out the finished piece.
“That looks pretty,” said Riot. The blouse still had three arms. “Is . . . one of those the neck hole?”
Eve considered the shirt, frowning slightly. “Oops,” she said, and trimmed one of the sleeves. “Better?”
“Way better,” agreed Riot. “That’s as pretty as a rainbow after a spring rain.”
Eve giggled.
They found some blue fabric for a skirt and little bits of brown for shoes, and Riot helped Eve glue and sew the pieces onto a burlap rag doll one of the nuns had made. As they worked, Chatty and Foobear crept down the tree and sat the edge of their blanket, watching with luminous dark eyes.
When the doll was nearly finished, Eve leaned over and bega
n sorting through the supplies until she found a nearly empty ball of bright red yarn. She held it against the doll to examine the color, and then nodded to herself. Riot watched as Eve cut off a few small pieces and began tying them around the doll’s neck. For one horrible moment Riot was afraid that Eve was making something like the red streamers that all the reapers wore tied to various places around their bodies. The streamers were symbolic of the red mouths opened in the flesh of the “heretics” that the reapers sent on into the eternal darkness. They were also dipped in a chemical mixture concocted by Sister Sun, which emitted a strong scent that discouraged the dead from attacking.
But that was not what Eve was doing.
She strung the red yarn around the doll’s throat.
“What’s that?” Riot asked, her smile broad and forced.
“A necklace.”
“Oh . . . nice. What kind of necklace? Is it a ruby necklace like a princess would wear?”
Eve looked at the red loop of yarn around the burlap throat of the doll. Then she slowly turned her face to Riot. The smile was so bright and happy.
“No, silly,” she said, “it’s like the one mommy wore. Remember? Her necklace was all bright and shiny.”