Down the stairs now. She cradles the boy in her right arm, her palm wrapped around his face. The girl is up inside her shirt. Malorie’s eyes are closed and the world is black and she needs sleep so bad she might as well fall from the stairs and into it. Only she walks, she steps, and she uses the phone as her guide.
Her feet touch the light blue carpeting of the second floor’s white hall. Eyes closed, she does not see these colors, just like she does not see Jules lying facedown along the right wall, five bloody streaks trailing from the height of her head to where his hand lies pressed against the floor.
At the top of the stairs, she pauses. She breathes deep. She believes she can do it. Then she continues.
She passes Cheryl but does not know it. Not yet. Cheryl’s head faces the first floor, her feet the second. Her body is horribly, unnaturally contorted.
Without knowing it, Malorie steps inches from her.
She almost touches Felix at the foot of the stairs. But she doesn’t. Later, she will gasp when she feels the holes in his face.
She has no idea she passes one of the huskies. It is slumped against the wall; the wall is stained dark purple.
She wants to say,
She follows the sound, leaning against the wall.
Rain and wind come in through broken windows.
If her eyes were to open, she would not be able to process the amount of blood marking the house.
She will see all of that later. But right now the phone is so loud, so close.
Malorie turns, puts her back against the wall, then slides, excruciatingly, to the carpet. The phone is on the small end table. Her body aches and burns, every part of it. Placing the boy beside the girl in her lap, she reaches out with her hand and fumbles for the phone that has been ringing without rest.
“Hello?”
“Hello.”
It’s a man. His voice sounds so calm. So horribly out of place.
“Who is this?” Malorie asks.
She can hardly understand that she is using a telephone.
“My name is Rick. We got your message a few days ago. I guess you could say we’ve been busy. What’s your name?”
“Who is this?”
“Again, my name is Rick. A man named Tom left a message with us.”
“Tom.”
“Yes. He does live there, right?”
“My name is Malorie.”
“Are you okay, Malorie? You sound broken up.”
Malorie breathes deep. She doesn’t think she will ever be okay again.
“Yes,” she answers. “I’m okay.”
“We haven’t got much time right now. Are you interested in getting out from where you are? Somewhere safer? I’m assuming the answer is yes.”
“Yes,” Malorie says.
“Here’s what you do then. Write this down if you can. Do you have a pen?”
Malorie says yes and reaches for the pen kept by Tom’s phone book.
The babies cry.
“It sounds like you have a baby with you?”
“I do.”
“I imagine that’s your reason for wanting to find a better place. Here’s the information, Malorie. Take the river.”
“What?”
“Take the river. Do you know where it is?”
“Y-yes. I do know where it is. It’s right behind the house. Eighty yards from the well, I’m told.”
“Good. Take the river. It’s about as dangerous a thing as you can do, but I imagine if you and Tom have made it this long, you can do it. I found you guys on the map and it looks like you’ll have to travel at least twenty miles. Now, the river is going to split—”
“It’s going to what?”
“I’m sorry. I’m probably moving too fast. But where I’m directing you is a better place.”
“How is that?”
“Well, we don’t have windows for one. We have running water. And we grow our own food. It’s as self-contained as you can find nowadays. There are plenty of bedrooms. Nice ones. Most of us think we’ve got it better now than we did before.”
“How many of you are there?”
“One hundred and eight.”
The number could be any for Malorie. Or it could be infinity.
“But let me tell you how to get here first. It would be a tragedy if the phone line went out before you knew where to go.”
“All right.”
“The river is going to split into four channels. The one you want is the second one from the right. So you can’t hug the right bank and expect to make it. It’s tricky. And you’re going to have to open your eyes.”
Malorie slowly shakes her head.
Rick continues.
“And this is how you’ll know when that time comes,” the man tells her. “You’ll hear a recording. A voice. We can’t sit by the river all day every day. It’s just too dangerous. Instead, we’ve got a speaker down there. It’s motion activated. We have a very clear understanding of the woods and water beyond our facility because of devices like it. Once the speaker is activated, the recording plays for thirty minutes, on a loop. You’ll hear it. The same forty-second sound bite repeated. It’s loud. Clear. And when you do, that’s when you’ll have to open your eyes.”