A girl was running across the littered lawn, skirting the rubble that had exploded outward in
a kind of corona. Three others were following her, two boys and another girl.
“Lukey!”
Luke ran to meet the girl in the lead and threw his arms around her. The other three joined
them, and as they hugged in a group embrace, Tim heard the hum again, but lower now. Some
of the rubble stirred, pieces of wood and stone rising into the air, then falling again. And didn’t
he hear the whisper of their mingled voices in his head? Maybe just his imagination, but . . .
“They’re
still putting out juice,” Stackhouse said.
He spoke disinterestedly,
like a man
passing the time of day. “I hear them. You do, too. Be careful. The effect is cumulative. It
turned Hallas and James into Heckle and Jeckle.” He gave a single bark of laughter. “Just a
couple of cartoon magpies with high-priced medical degrees.”
Tim ignored this and let the children have their joyous reunion—who on God’s earth
deserved one more? He kept an eye on the Institute’s three adult survivors. Although they did
not, in fact, look as if they were going to give him any trouble.
“What am I going to do with you assholes?” Tim asked. Not really talking to the survivors,
just thinking aloud.
“Please don’t kill us,” Doug said. He pointed to the group hug that was still going on. “I fed
those youngsters. I kept them alive.”
“I wouldn’t try to justify anything you did here if
you
want
to stay alive,” Tim said.
“Shutting up might be the wisest course.” He turned his attention to Stackhouse. “Looks like
we won’t need the bus after all, since you killed most of the kids—”
“
We
didn’t—”
“Are you deaf? I said shut it.”
Stackhouse saw what was in the man’s face. It didn’t
look like heroism, misguided or
otherwise. It looked like murder. He shut it.
“We need a ride out of here,” Tim said, “and I really don’t want to have to march you happy
warriors through the woods to this village Luke says you have. It’s been a long, tiring day. Any
suggestions?”
Stackhouse seemed not to have heard him. He was looking at the remains of Front Half, and
the remains of the admin building squashed beneath it. “All this,” he marveled. “All this
because of one runaway boy.”
Tim kicked him lightly in the ankle. “Pay attention, shithead. How do I get those kids out of
here?”
28
The last survivors of the Institute hugged and hugged and hugged.
Luke felt that he could
embrace them like this forever, and feel them embracing him, because he had never expected to
see any of them again. For the moment all they needed was inside the huddled circle they made
on this littered lawn. All they needed was each other. The world and all its problems could go
fuck itself.
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