“Great,” Rafe muttered. “Another nutjob who thinks the quarantine will end in his lifetime. Dream on, pal.”
We moved through the front hall into the main room where a girl, barely a teenager, sat in the open window. In her green gown and gold necklaces, with her dark hair falling to her waist, she looked every inch the fairy-tale princess … until she threw a jelly jar at us. “Get out of here!” She smeared her sticky, red fingers on her dress and then jiggled her wrist until something dropped from her sleeve into her palm. A switchblade! Snapping open the blade, the girl sprang at us, only to be brought up short by the chain around her waist.
I followed the winding chain with my eyes from the padlock at the girl’s hip to the other side of the room where it wrapped around a defunct radiator. Was she feral? I scuttled back. Why else would she be chained up? Although Rafe didn’t seem too concerned as he strolled past her. Nor did he seem fazed that the girl had her switchblade pointed directly at him. “I’m looking for Alva Soto. Is that you?” he asked as he opened a closet door.
“What are you, a thief?”
“Nope.” He brushed his hand over the colorful gowns and fur coats hanging in the closet.
“You look like a thief.”
“Yeah? Usually I get astronaut.” He double-checked the furs with a rough shake.
“If you’re looking for my papa, he’s out.”
He glanced back at her. “I’m here to talk to Alva. That you?”
Pursing her lips, the girl turned her glare on me. I was tempted to apologize for busting in and for the way Rafe was pawing through her things.
“Alva, yes … no … ?” he prompted, but the girl just glared at him. “Come on, Lane.” He turned for the door. “Guess we have the wrong crappy building.”
“Wait!” the girl screeched before he’d even gone a step. “I’m Alva.”
I tensed, expecting him to laugh at Alva’s quick about-face, but his expression was placid as he turned, like this situation was no big deal. “Glad we got that settled.”
“Who left you like this?” The words blurted out of me. I couldn’t believe how blasé they were both being. “Who chained you up?”
“Who do you think, smart girl?”
My mouth dropped open. She was locked up, in need of help, and yet she was giving us attitude? Alva swished the chain, knocking over a dozen empty jelly jars on the coffee table. “I’m not talking unless you get this off me.”
“All right. Where’s the key?” Rafe asked.
“You’ve got a gun. Shoot it off.” She lifted the padlock.
“What happens when the bullet rebounds and hits you?”
Alva frowned, considering it.
“Your dad has the key?” Rafe guessed.
She nodded. “He doesn’t want me to go outside. He’s scared I’ll disappear like my sister.” There was irritation in her voice, nothing more, which made the whole scene worse.
“You know ferals can climb stairs, right?” Rafe said. “So can mongrels and scumbags. Anything could have walked through that door and found you.”
“You think I asked for this? Lecture my papa, not me.” Alva closed the switchblade and tucked it back into her sleeve. “He’s going crazy,” she grumbled.
“We noticed.” Rafe waved at the piled jewelry that made the place look like a dragon’s lair.
“What’s that got to do with anything? He’s crazy because Fabiola is gone.”
“So why are you still living outside the compound?”
She shrugged. “Papa thinks people in town will steal our savings.”
I really hoped she wasn’t referring to the obsolete electronics stacked in the corners.
“If it were powdered milk or potato flakes, maybe. But this crap?” Rafe snorted.
The girl didn’t reply, just traced her fingers over the knife in her sleeve. He shouldn’t make her feel bad about her father. I nudged him. “Can you do something about that chain?”
Sighing, he pulled a couple of thin tools from his back pocket, swept a stack of pre-exodus money off the coffee table, and sat. When Alva moved to stand in front of him, he studied the padlock. “So, how long has your sister been missing?” he asked without looking up.
Alva inhaled sharply. “That’s why you’re here, isn’t it?” Her hands flew to her throat. “Because of Fabiola. Someone found her. She’s dead!”
“No,” he said quickly. “I mean, I don’t know. I just came for information.”
The tension left Alva’s body and she slumped. “Is the feral back? That’s what Papa heard. That it ripped up a farmer.”
“Nobody knows for sure what killed him. Lots of things have claws.” Rafe went to work on the lock. “Is there any chance your sister just ran away?”
“If she was going to take off, she would’ve told me.”
“Does she have a boyfriend?” He jiggled the slender tool and the padlock popped open.
“We’re not allowed to date.” The chain snaked from around Alva’s waist and clattered to the floor, but she didn’t move, just fingered her many necklaces. “Papa worries. He told us to carry a blade at all times. A lot of good it did her,” Alva said, sounding as if all the fight had been stamped out of her. “The feral is back.”
Rafe got to his feet. “Did you see something?”
“No, but when we were outside, Fabiola felt it. She knew.” Alva drew in a ragged breath. “And I told her she was crazy.”
“Knew what?” I asked.
“That she was being hunted.”
13
“You were checking to see if Alva knew something about her sister that their father didn’t,” I guessed when we were outside again.
“Yeah.” Rafe exhaled slowly. “Too bad she didn’t run off with a boyfriend. Means the feral probably did get her.”
The buildings slouched closer together as we walked north, and yet the street seemed rural because of all the creeping, climbing vegetation that was slowly tearing down everything man-made.
He pointed down the road a ways to a wall of crushed cars, stacked like bricks. “Welcome to the Moline compound,” he said. “When we get inside, stick close.”
I bristled. “I’m not totally helpless you know. I’ve taken self-defense classes and kickboxing and —”
“Yeah, ’cause Mack made you.”
I stopped in surprise, but Rafe walked on. “He worries that you’re too nice,” he said over his shoulder.
“I’m not too nice!”
Rafe held up his hands. “Getting no argument from me.”
“Oh, I’m supposed to be more like you? A selfish jerk?” I jogged to catch up. “Stealing from infirmaries, throwing people in closets when they get in the way? Cutting them!”
He shot me an amused look. “You might try it sometime.”
I shook my head, suddenly feeling sick.
“What?” he asked, catching my expression. “You’ve been the good girl your whole —”
“No. Not when I was little. Just the opposite.” The words felt like broken glass in my mouth. “I was so … so awful. I wore my mom out.”
His brow furrowed. “Your mother died of cancer.”
“The doctor said she had a year to live, but she died two months later — because of me.”
“Says who?” Rafe scoffed.
“The home health nurse.” I rubbed by eyes — like that would erase her red, sweaty face from my mind.
“She told you that?”
“She said I was an unmanageable little beast and that I’d send my mom to an even earlier grave.” I caught my breath. I hadn’t thought about that horrible nurse in years and I didn’t want to now. “Can we go find my dad now?”