And still he moved forward. Because, moving forward on its own--counted as a victory. He had to take those when he could.
By fate or purpose or some twisted mixture of the two, he trudged along. Not in pursuit of anything or anyone, but paranoid and frantic all the same. He had lost a lot of blood--so he thought. He had been more than lucky--so he definitely knew. Luckier than most, relatively speaking.
And yet, at the same time, in spite of that luck-- he was among the unluckiest group of eighteen-year-old kids on the planet. Win some, lose some.
It was easy to do anything in victory, it was only in defeat that you truly revealed yourself.
Wise words given to him by an unwise man, a lifetime ago.
He had done his best to clean his “wound”—a left ear that had always been too big but now had been reduced to a bloody and twisted nub of burnt cartilage. He had cleaned it as best as he could with what he had in his pack. He had wrapped it with a big thing of gauze on the ear and then bandages around his whole head. A headband as good as any. He shed his cotton-tank, coated in blood and sweat.
No shirt, dirty shoes, and lackluster medical service…
But two big guns, one in the duffel and one in his arms.
Fat good they had done.
The SPAS-12 remained the weapon of choice, but the BR-18 was in his duffel bag, loaded and ready to be pulled out. Spray and pray. Point and shoot. He couldn’t hesitate, not anymore. Shoot first--ask questions later, think never. He could only keep following 2/3 for so long. He felt a pounding in his head, he felt the tightness of his bandages holding that gauze coated in antiseptic in place.
The night air cooled his sweat coated body, bugs bit his back and arms…
He lowered his hat, brim so low he could barely see over the blue horizon…
He choked down another ibuprofen with a sip of water...
And he looked for shelter.
A familiar, weaving, zig zagging path through buildings and alleys. He had chased Justin through the other village with a similar frantic and directionless methodology. It was hard for people to figure out your next move if you yourself didn’t even know it.
Lies and Bullshit You Tell Yourself for 1200 Alex.
He searched for shelter and respite and there was plenty of it…he still kept walking. He would know when he should stop.
He stopped when he found a body.
As unrecognizable as she was to his eyes, his core seemed to recognize her immediately. A unique skill he had just developed over a week of practice—puttin’ names to dead bodies.
“Told you to stay outta trouble T…,” he said uneasily, “But you ain’t ever listen to nobody, did you?”
He looked at her and felt a pang of mixed emotion and the guilt of a duty rejected. Tirzah had been a lost soul--he had known that when he had spoken to her last. Probably a bit before. A lost soul just doing her best. It wasn’t Tirzah’s fault that doing her best meant being her worst. She couldn’t help herself—he had related to that. Almost admired the way she dealt with it.
He felt sorry for her. He felt sad about her death. He felt guilty that he hadn’t stepped up and stopped her himself. For Wyatt. For Toby. For Tirzah herself. He should’ve shot her the moment he realized she couldn’t be saved. Not that it mattered. Tirzah didn’t trust anybody but Tirzah, not really.
He couldn’t save her--she hadn’t wanted to be saved.
And who is you to save her? Even if she had wanted that shit?
He missed his friend, but he had missed her for a week now.
Seeing that ghost who called herself Tirzah a few days ago had only done so much…
And seeing this body so very, very little.
He felt sick when confronted again with that coldness in his heart.
He didn’t like how easy that sickness could be swallowed now.
The way she was propped up and lying there—it reminded him of Aliya. Who he had just left up against a building in some mimicry and mockery of dignity. Was Tirzah moved? And whoever did it—were they still around? Curiosity beat out caution and a desire for answers seemed to be the only catharsis worth grabbing. He went to the house, around the side and out to the front and he found the door. He gripped the shotgun, his hands trembling—but at this point the trembling had become a familiar friend. It was a comfort, in a way.
He closed his eyes…
Shoot first, ask questions later…think never.
He knocked on the door instead.
1 for 3 wasn’t the worst thing.