“Jenni, what do you mean?”
“I’m here to save you and Travis,” Jenni replied. “Cause if I don’t, tonight you’re both going to die. ”
* * * * * “Everyone deals with stress differently,” Travis said uneasily.
“Yeah, I know. I just, you know, being a cop and all, I just see how things are going seriously wrong and I want to set it right. ”
“I know what you mean. ” Travis watched Curtis thoughtfully.
“I see people doing shitty things to other people and I just want to tell them that they need to shape up and get with the program. This is the law.
You gotta obey it. You know, I believe in order. But lately. . . ” Curtis shook his head. “I can’t even find order in my own damned life. ”
Tucking his hands into his jean pockets, Travis bobbed his head slowly.
“Yeah, I know what you mean. We’re all just doing our best. ”
“But people keep on dying, Travis, don’t they?”
Measuring his words carefully, Travis answered, “This world is dominated by death, Curtis. The living got a rough time of it. ”
“Yeah, yeah,” Curtis agreed. “But sometimes, you know, the living make it harder on the rest of the living. ”
Travis tried to keep his face neutral, but he felt his body beginning to tense.
“How many people are gonna die, Travis? I don’t mean when those fucking zombies get here. But tonight? Tomorrow? The suicides haven’t even started yet, you know? But they will. Bill warned me about them.
Gawddamn lucky it ain’t like those old zombie movies where you just die and you’re a zombie else we’d be shit out of luck fast. ”
Standing in silence, Travis looked at the younger man, studying the policeman’s tense posture and flushed face with growing anxiety. “We’re doing what we can, Curtis. ”
“Yeah, yeah, we are. Right. Saving people. Bringing them here. Taking a fucking stand against religious people who just don’t agree with us. But maybe they were right, Travis. Did you think of that? Your girl got all right and straight,” Curtis laughed sarcastically. “But my girl went all queer when you got the mall folks here. They are corrupters and sinners!
Do you even give a shit about that?”
“Linda and Bette-”
“And you say their names together like they fucking belong together. They don’t! Linda, my Linda, was okay before those shitbags from the mall got here. And that nigger-”
“Hey!” Travis voice was harsh. “Don’t go there. ”
Curtis glared evenly at Travis. “This is the country, city boy. We talk different out here though you may not like it. And why the hell is an outsider our leader anyway?”
“Curtis, I’m one of many who make decisions around-”
“You blew into town all fancy and handsome. All the girls got all crazy about you right away. Making a big deal out of you and your fancy ways.
Then all this shit hits and you’re the fucking king? If the Mayor wasn’t such a pussy and rolled over for you, we may have had a little more fucking luck with keeping our fucking senses and taking care of our own before dragging every fucking faggot, raghead, nigger-”
The punch was hard, fierce, and caught Curtis in mid-sentence. It knocked him back a few feet and stunned him. Shrouded in shadows, the younger man slowly brought his hand up to his face, feeling the quickly swelling flesh beneath his fingers.
Trying to keep calm, Travis said softly, “You’re freaking out, Curtis. You need to calm the hell down right now. I’ll drag your ass down to the clinic and sedate you if I have to. ”
In the darkness, the younger man stood in silence then slowly, methodically stepped into the light. “Try it,”he said in a low whisper and a knife glittered in the starlight.
* * * * * “What do you mean?” Katie demanded, her eyes widening. “Explain, Jenni!”
Jenni tilted her head, looking at the alarm clock. Grabbing it up, she studied the numbers then cocked her head again, as if remembering something. “Oh, fuck, I was always late when I was alive. ”