the options. The city council is meeting
now
and
he’ll
have
their
recommendation by then.”
“That’s nice,” Wyatt sneered. “I’m
sure we’ll be kissing their collective ass
and going along with whatever they
decide is the best move.”
Elliott’s mouth twitched. “Vaughn’s
playing the game. He has to. This might
be the last bastion of civilization, but it’s
still a democracy. Er . . . to some
extent,” he added when he saw Wyatt’s
expression.
“Let’s go,” Wyatt said abruptly,
looking down at Remy. “We’ll be back
at midnight,” he added to the others as he
drew her away.
Remy found herself walking quickly
to keep up with Wyatt’s long, purposeful
strides. She supposed it was best to be
moving, for it was less likely someone
would catch sight of her beneath a
streetlight or the flashes of neon.
She wasn’t really worried about
being easily recognized. After all, it
wasn’t as if Goldwyn had a photograph
of her that he would be showing around.
Nevertheless, as Wyatt went into the
community kitchen to scrounge up some
food, she stayed off in a corner,
pretending to be examining an old
painting on the wall. She couldn’t
remember the last time she’d eaten, and
when he handed her a sandwich, she
realized she was ravenous. They ate and
drank quickly, still lingering in the
corner, Remy with her back to the room
at large, then he said, “Come on.”
A few minutes and several flights of
stairs later, Wyatt opened the door to his
room (or so she assumed; true to form,
he hadn’t actually given her any
explanation as to where they were
going) and she stepped inside. Closing
the door, he flipped a switch and the soft
glow from a series of wall sconces and
lamps filled the space.
The room was simple, sparse and
neat. Moonlight shone through the open
curtains and large windows on one wall.
A row of books lined the windowsill;
too far away for her to see the titles. The
bed was made, its sheets and coverlet
tight and sharply creased, the pillows
positioned at right angles, their cases
smooth and wrinkle-free. A few items
sat on one dresser and in a small square
pile on the floor. She could see a hint of
the bathroom through an ajar door, smell
the faint, pleasant scent of man clinging
to the space, and noticed a small
rectangular object on the table next to the
bed.
“Your stuff’s over there,” Wyatt said,
jerking his head toward a bundle on the
dresser.
“My stuff?”
“Your things from the truck.”
“Really?” She was over to the bureau
in a flash. Her pack—which she’d had to
leave behind during the craziness of the
zombie attack and her slim chance to
slip away—was there, and filled with
her stuff. “How did—you must have
gone back the next morning,” she said,
answering her own question before she
could even ask it.
It was all there: her new tank tops,
the bras and panties, the cute blue
sundress, and the other treasures she’d
found. “Oh, thank you for going back to
get my things, Wyatt. You have no idea
—
thank you.
” Then, a little embarrassed
by the naked emotion in her tones, she
glanced over to see his reaction.
She caught him by surprise; she must
have, for he whipped his attention away
from her. But not before she saw the
look in his glittering eyes. Heat, raw and
dark.
Her belly dropped, her mouth went
dry, and she faltered, her attention
skittering away as if she’d seen
something she shouldn’t have. Something
so private and personal that she had to
pretend it didn’t exist. Her insides were
a tangle, fluttering and hot and confused,
and she didn’t know what to say, how to
react—of course she couldn’t react. His
now stony expression, bordering on
angry, discouraged any sort of response.
His stiff posture, his fists, tight at his
sides, his flat, cool eyes.
“No problem,” he said, turning away
to dig through what appeared to be his
own pack.
And then, as she tried to find a way
out of the awkward moment, Remy
noticed the other item on the dresser. A
thick,
heavy,
hard-covered
book.
Completely intact. “
The Count of Monte
Cristo
,” she said, picking it up. Her
heart thumped, hard.
“I thought you might want to finish
it,” he said, still busy with his back to
her. His voice sounded strange. “Since
you never did.”
Something shimmered through her,
warm and tingly, swelling inside her like
a warm flower blossoming large.
“Thank you.” Her reply, she realized,
was hardly more than a whisper. “This
is your copy?” She glanced toward the
makeshift bookshelf.
He stilled for a moment, then went
over to draw the curtains closed, hiding
the books on the sill. “I . . . uh . . . came
across an old library on the way back
here and scavenged around to see if I
could find it.”
“You just came across an old
library?” Remy’s heart was thumping
harder now, and that warm rush
continued to bloom through her insides.
“Just by accident? Really.”
And just
happened to find a copy of this book?
She turned to face him. His expression
had eased into chagrin and impatience
layered with chill.
A man at war with himself.
“It was only a little out of the way,”
he said. Defensively.
Remy put the book down. Before she
realized it, she’d walked across the
room toward him. Stark panic flared in
his eyes when he realized she’d
positioned herself so he was trapped in
the corner by the curtain pull, or he’d
have to actually walk past her—possibly
brush against her—to move away.
“You could have just told me how it
ended,” she said, looking up at him.
Whoa.
He was so close, so solid, so
dark and forbidding . . . and yet at the
same time, he looked like little more
than a trapped animal. Her chest swelled
and she found it hard to breathe. “Instead
of taking the chance of being found by
the zombies. While carrying my crystal.”
She let her voice drop low, let the
huskiness slide into it.
“What the hell are you doing,
Remy?” His voice was sharp and hard,
and she saw the defenses shoot up like a
shield. His lips went taut and he actually
held up a hand, as if to ward her off.
“Thanking you.”
“Great, you’ve thanked me. Now
could you—”
But she’d taken his upheld hand and
raised it so she could see better in the
light. His skin was warm, his wrist solid
and strong. But something else had her
attention. “What’s all this black stuff?”
she said, looking at the delicate skin on
the underside of his wrist. There was
black in the creases there, which wasn’t
so unusual in itself . . . but a patch of it
was flaking off . . . almost like a burn.
“Is this from the fire? You
did
get
burned, didn’t you?”
Wyatt snatched his arm away and
pushed past her. He strode across the
room, and when he turned, he was
grinding his thumb and forefinger into
his eyes and the bridge of his nose. “I’ll
tell you about it. But first, I’m going to
shower. Get the rest of it off.”
Remy blinked. “Get the rest of what
—”
But he was already stalking toward
the front door, throwing the bolt lock
into place with a loud clank, clicking the
chain lock into its slot. “Do not open the
door to anyone,” he said, his eyes boring
into her. “Anyone. I don’t care who they
are.”
“What if Elliott or Que—”
“
No one
, Remy,” he said, already on
his way to the other room. He paused on
the threshold to the bathroom. “If
someone comes to the door, you let me
know.”
“Right. I’m going to walk in on you in
the shower?” she said, just to see what
his reaction would be.
“Knock,”
he said, then slammed the
door shut.
Remy stared after him, shaking her
head as she heard the spray of water
start in the shower. And then she
couldn’t help but picture what was
happening on the other side of that door:
Wyatt peeling off his shirt, sliding out of
those long jeans and whatever he wore
beneath. She felt hot and breathless,
unable to keep her imagination from
running rampant. With a chest like his,
arms and shoulders as sleek and
muscular as they were, legs so long and
lean . . . she knew the rest of him had to
be worth going breathless and fluttery
over.
But . . . jeez . . . Wyatt. He was an
angry jerk of a man who couldn’t seem
to let himself feel.
A man at war with himself.
Jade was right; there was no better
way to describe him.
Despite that, Remy still found herself
wanting to be with him. Attracted to him,
yes—who the hell wouldn’t be?—but
despite his prickly nature, his moods,
and that underlying rage, she was drawn
to him. She trusted him. Cared about
him. Sometimes even liked him.
Am I crazy?
Her attention went back to the book.
To the pile of her things on the dresser.
To the fact that he’d stolen her crystal
and kept it in order to protect her from
the zombies. And that, while carrying it,
he’d taken a detour to an old library . . .
and then that moment in Cat’s room,
when he’d realized she was there. An
instant of naked emotion.
That burst of heat swelled inside her
once more, making her a little light-
headed. He did care. He didn’t want to,
but he did. In some way, some small
way, he cared about her.
But was it worth it to try and find out
how much?
Especially . . .
The rush of cold fear swept away her
soft, bubbly, warm feelings. Reality
returned, gouging out the heat and
leaving her empty and cold in the pit of
her stomach.
Less than a day. What am I going to
do?
The options were pretty limited. And
although she’d tried not to think about it
too much, Remy knew what she would
have to do. After all, there was no way
to keep the city safe from an attack by
the Strangers—especially since they
seemed to have helicopters, and who
knew what other weapons. How did one
protect people from dropped bombs and
mechanical vehicles in this day and age?
And now that there was no way to
evacuate the city . . .
Her insides twisted, sharp and hard.
There wasn’t much choice. There wasn’t
any choice, really. She’d have to go to
them. Find out what they wanted . . .
even though she pretty much knew.
At least she could leave the crystal
here . . . maybe as a bargaining chip.
That might keep her alive.
But she sure as hell didn’t want the
crystal getting into the hands of the
Strangers. One life wasn’t worth the
havoc they’d be sure to wreak once they
had the Mother crystal.
A sharp knock on the door startled
her out of her thoughts, and Remy froze,
her breath catching. She glanced at the
bathroom, heard the sounds of spraying
water, then back at the door. Someone
knocked again, harder and more loudly.
Heart thumping, she tiptoed over and
looked through the peephole. David and
Cat stood there and she reached for the
chain lock, then hesitated.
No one.
What put Wyatt in control of her life?
Why did she have to listen to him? This
was Cat and David . . . they’d already
helped her. Both of them. She trusted